ABSTRACT

What happens when the outside world enters the psychoanalytic space? In The Rupture of Serenity: External Intrusions and Psychoanalytic Technique, the author draws on clinical material to describe some of the dilemmas she has encountered in her work with patients when external factors have entered the treatment frame. She considers analytic dilemmas that range from how to deal with patients' unusual requests regarding the conduct of an analytic treatment to the question of how to handle events in the analyst's personal life that, by necessity, must be addressed in the analysis. As a Muslim of Pakistani origin, the author is also able to discuss, frankly and with compassion, the role that ethnic and religious differences between patient and analyst can play in treatment-differences that, in the aftermath of 9/11 and the search for and killing of Osama bin Laden, became a palpable presence in her consulting room.

part I|22 pages

When Events in the Analyst’s Life Intrude upon Clinical Space

part II|43 pages

When Others Intrude upon Clinical Space

chapter Two|21 pages

Waiting-room dramas between patients

part III|42 pages

When Machines Intrude Upon Clinical Space

part IV|43 pages

When Political Events Intrude Upon Clinical Space