ABSTRACT

Winner of the American Board & Academy of Psychoanalysis Prize for best Edited book published in 2016

Psychoanalysis in Italy is a particularly diverse and vibrant profession, embracing a number of influences and schools of thought, connecting together new thinking, and producing theorists and clinicians of global renown. Reading Italian Psychoanalysis provides a comprehensive guide to the most important Italian psychoanalytic thinking of recent years, including work by major names such as Weiss, E.Gaddini, Matte Blanco, Nissim Momigliano, Canestri, Amati Mehler, and Ferro. It covers the most important theoretical developments and clinical advances, with special emphasis on contemporary topics such as transference, trauma and primitive states of mind where Italian work has been particular influential.

In this volume, Franco Borgogno, Alberto Luchetti and Luisa Marino Coe of the Italian Psychoanalytical Society provide an overview of how Italian psychoanalysis has developed from the 1920’s to the present day, tracing its early influences and highlighting contemporary developments. Forty-six seminal and representative papers of psychoanalysts belonging to the two Italian psychoanalytical societies (the Italian Psychoanalytical Society and the Italian Association of Psychoanalysis) have been chosen to illuminate what is special about Italian theoretical and clinical thinking, and what is demonstrative of the specificity of its psychoanalytic discourse. The selected papers are preceded by a first introductory section about the history of psychoanalysis in Italy and followed by a "swift glance at Italian psychoanalysis from abroad". They are grouped into sections which represent the areas particularly explored by Italian psychoanalysis. Each section is accompanied by introductory comments which summarize the main ideas and concepts and also their historical and cultural background, so as to offer to the reader either an orientation and stimulus for the debate and to indicate their connections to other papers included in the present volume and to the international psychoanalytic world.

The book is divided into six parts including:

  • History of psychoanalysis in Italy
  • Metapsychology
  • Clinical practice, theory of technique, therapeutic factors
  • The person of the analyst, countertransference and the analytic relationship/field
  • Trauma, psychic pain, mourning and working-through
  • Preverbal, precocious, fusional, primitive states of the mind

This volume offers an excellent and detailed "fresco" of Italian psychoanalytic debate, shining a light on thinking that has evolved differently in France, England, North and Latin America. It is an ideal book for beginners and advanced students of clinical theory as well as experienced psychoanalysts wanting to know more about Italian psychoanalytic theory and technique, and how they have developed.

part |29 pages

History Of Psychoanalysis in Italy

part |148 pages

Metapsychology

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter |17 pages

Transference

Notes on the history of a paradox 1

chapter |18 pages

Transference and Unconscious Communication

Countertransference, theories and the analyst's narcissism 1

chapter |12 pages

At the Origins of Psychoanalysis

Freud, Lipps and the issue of sound and music 1

part |150 pages

Clinical Practice, Theory of Technique, Therapeutic Factors

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

chapter |15 pages

Meeting, Telling and Parting

Three basic factors in the psychoanalytic experience 1

chapter |18 pages

Interpretation and Construction

The work of transformation in psychoanalytic practice 1

part |108 pages

The Person of the Analyst, Countertransference and The Analytic Relationship/Field

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter |12 pages

Two people talking in a room

An investigation into the analytic dialogue 1

chapter |15 pages

The Complex Nature of Psychoanalytic Empathy

A theoretical and clinical exploration 1

chapter |9 pages

Chiasma 1

chapter |8 pages

Reverie and Metaphor

A particular way to investigate the unconscious in psychoanalytical practice 1

chapter |18 pages

The Person of the Analyst

Interpreting, not interpreting and countertransference 1

part |123 pages

Trauma, Psychic Pain, Mourning and Working-Through

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter |9 pages

The Rejected Infant

Reflections on depersonalisation 1

chapter |18 pages

Surviving, Existing, Living

Reflections on the analyst's anxiety 1

chapter |21 pages

On The Patient's Becoming An Individual

The importance of the analyst's personal response to a deprived schizoid patient 1

chapter |15 pages

‘The Dead Sybil'

Reparation and restitution of an absence 1

chapter |13 pages

Violated minds

Thoughts on Dora, Schreber, Paul and others 1

part |122 pages

Preverbal, Precocious, Fusional, Primitive States of The Mind

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter |15 pages

On imitation 1

chapter |8 pages

Psychic birth 1

chapter |14 pages

Hysteria, from the origins to the Oedipal constellation

The ‘feminine' and the conflict against otherness 1

chapter |17 pages

Primitive Mental States and The Body

A personal view of Armando B. Ferrari's concrete original object 1

part |12 pages

Afterword