ABSTRACT

In this groundbreaking volume, the authors bring us into the immediacy of the analyst's consulting room in direct confrontation with the thought disorder, delusions and hallucinations of their patients grappling with psychosis. From the early days of psychoanalysis when Freud explicated the famous Schreber case, analysts of all persuasions have brought a variety of theories to bear on the problem of schizophrenia and the other psychoses. Here, as William Butler Yeats notes, "the centre cannot hold" and any sense of self-esteem - positive feelings about oneself, a continuous sense of self in time and a functional coherence and cohesion of self - is shattered or stands in imminent danger. What makes psychoanalytic self psychology so compelling as a framework for understanding psychosis is how it links together the early recognition of narcissistic impairment in these disorders to the "experience-near" focus which is the hallmark of self psychology.

part I|77 pages

Mirroring

chapter One|20 pages

The opening phase—the case of Judith

chapter Two|23 pages

Judith—the middle phase*

chapter Three|11 pages

Repair of the self—Judith

chapter Four|19 pages

The infrastructure of the vertical split

part II|28 pages

Idealizing

chapter Five|15 pages

Rachel—in need of an internal safe haven

chapter Six|10 pages

Three rats and the extraterrestrial

part III|43 pages

Alikeness (Twinship)