ABSTRACT

The Theory and Practice of Psychoanalytic Therapy: Listening for the Subtext outlines the core concepts that frame the reciprocal encounter between psychoanalytic therapist and patient, taking the reader into the psychoanalytic therapy room and giving detailed examples of how the interaction between patient and therapist takes place.

The book argues that the therapist must capture both nonverbal affects and unsymbolized experiences, proposing a distinction between structuralized and actualized affects, and covering key topics such as transference, countertransference and enactment. It emphasizes the unconscious meaning in the here-and-now, as well as the need for affirmation to support more classical styles of intervention. The book integrates object relational and structural perspectives, in a theoretical position called relational oriented character analysis. It argues the patient’s ways-of-being constitute relational strategies carrying implicit messages – a "subtext" – and provides detailed examples of how to capture this underlying dialogue.

Packed with detailed clinical examples and displaying a unique interplay between clinical observation and theory, this wide-ranging book will appeal to psychotherapists, psychoanalysts and clinical psychologists in practice and in training.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part I|2 pages

Theoretical foundation

chapter 1|30 pages

Key concepts

chapter 2|12 pages

Epistemological questions

part II|2 pages

The clinic

chapter 3|5 pages

A model

chapter 4|6 pages

The frame

chapter 5|8 pages

The psychoanalytic space

chapter 6|9 pages

Therapeutic listening

chapter 7|5 pages

The affective quality

chapter 8|14 pages

Ego functioning

chapter 9|28 pages

Dynamics

chapter 10|10 pages

The analytic attitude

chapter 11|26 pages

The therapist’s interventions

chapter 12|23 pages

Clinical moves

chapter 13|12 pages

The end of the road

part III|2 pages

Theory of change

chapter 14|13 pages

On the curative

chapter 15|9 pages

On validation