ABSTRACT

Patients in psychoanalytic treatment present with a variety of problems that reflect contemporary cultural issues and values. Clinical Evolutions on the Superego, Body, and Gender in Psychoanalysis explores the effects of such societal changes on psychoanalytic theory and clinical practice, covering topics such as greed, envy and deception, body narcissism, gender roles, and relationships. Janice S. Lieberman includes numerous clinical vignettes and insights into working clinically with changing norms.

Lieberman explores how changes in values and norms of behavior in the world beyond the consulting room have influenced what is now heard by analysts within it, using clinical data to demonstrate the psychological underpinnings of the values promulgated by current trends in politics and in society more widely. She explores what she observes to be "a new superego"; where deception abounds and often goes unpunished, where greed and envy have arguably increased and there is an enhanced emphasis on the body and its appearance. Traditional gender roles have been challenged in fortuitous ways, but a certain amount of chaos and confusion has ensued. Relationships are found and maintained using technology, yet many feel lonely and empty. She writes about the clinical dilemmas she has faced and offers suggestions for resolving them in working with today’s patients. Lieberman also sees parallels for these developments in several artists’ lives and in their work.

Clinical Evolutions on the Superego, Body, and Gender in Psychoanalysis will be of great interest to psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Loss of integrity in contemporary culture and contemporary psyche

part I|50 pages

Superego/character issues

chapter Chapter 1|16 pages

Analyzing a “new superego”?

Greed and envy in the recent age of affluence 1

chapter Chapter 2|24 pages

Lies and omissions in psychoanalytic treatment 1

chapter Chapter 3|4 pages

The availability (and responsibility) of the analyst

“Above all, do no harm”

chapter Chapter 4|4 pages

Construction outside, reconstruction inside

The analyst’s office under siege

part 61II|66 pages

Body, skin, and gender

chapter Chapter 5|3 pages

The female body

A discussion of Malkah Notman’s 2003 paper

chapter Chapter 6|13 pages

The analyst as reluctant spectator

Working with women obsessed with thinness 1

chapter Chapter 7|23 pages

The analyst’s rush to metaphor 1

chapter Chapter 8|8 pages

Body narcissism and linguistic attunement 1

chapter Chapter 9|10 pages

Outrageous women

The “Cleopatra complex”

chapter Chapter 10|7 pages

The male psyche

An even darker continent

part 127III|36 pages

Relationships

chapter Chapter 12|7 pages

Sex and the City on the couch

chapter Chapter 13|5 pages

The search for love in a digital age

chapter Chapter 14|5 pages

The mediated gaze

part 163IV|53 pages

Superego, gender, and body in art

chapter Chapter 15|6 pages

Violence against women in the work of women artists 1

chapter Chapter 16|18 pages

The imposturous artist Arshile Gorky 1

chapter Chapter 17|13 pages

Pedophilic themes in Balthus’ works

chapter Chapter 18|12 pages

Is appropriation creative?

The case of Richard Prince

chapter Chapter 19|2 pages

Afterword