ABSTRACT

The "relational turn" has transformed the field of psychoanalysis, with an impact that cuts across different schools of thought and clinical modalities.

In the six years following publication of Volume 1, Relational Psychoanalysis: The Emergence of a Tradition, relational theorizing has continued to develop, expand, and challenge the parameters of clinical discourse. It has been a period of loss, with the passing of Stephen A. Mitchell and Emmanuel Ghent, but also a period of great promise, marked by the burgeoning publication of relational books and journals and the launching of relational training institutes and professional associations.

Volume 2, Relational Psychoanalysis: Innovation and Expansion, brings together key papers of the recent past that exemplify the continuing growth and refinement of the relational sensibility. In selecting these papers, Editors Lewis Aron and Adrienne Harris have stressed the shared relational dimension of different psychoanalytic traditions, and they have used such commonalities to structure the best recent contributions to the literature. The topics covered in Volume 2 reflect both the evolution of psychoanalysis and the unique pathways that leading relational writers have been pursuing and in some cases establishing.

part |201 pages

Therapeutic Action

chapter |21 pages

Holding

Something Old and Something New * (1996)

chapter |45 pages

Why the Analyst Needs to Change

Toward a Theory of Conflict, Negotiation, and Mutual Influence in the Therapeutic Process (1998)

chapter |23 pages

Show Some Emotion

Completing the Cycle of Affective Communication (1999)

chapter |29 pages

Psychoanalytic Supervision

The Intersubjective Development (2000)

chapter |27 pages

On Misreading and Misleading Patients

Some Reflections on Communications, Miscommunications, and Countertransference Enactments (2001)

part |147 pages

Relational Perspectives on Development

chapter |48 pages

Representation and Internalization in Infancy

Three Principles of Salience (1994)

chapter |32 pages

Having a Mind of One's Own and Holding the Other in Mind

Commentary on Paper by Peter Fonagy and Mary Target * (1998)

chapter |39 pages

The Two–Person Unconscious

Intersubjective Dialogue, Enactive Relational Representation, and the Emergence of New Forms of Relational Organization (1999)

part |118 pages

Social and Cultural Dimensions of Relationality

chapter |24 pages

Race, Self-Disclosure, and “Forbidden Talk”

Race and Ethnicity in Contemporary Psychoanalytic Practice (1997)

chapter |28 pages

More Life

Centrality and Marginality in Human Development (2001)