ABSTRACT

Practitioners of psychoanalysis find three central themes to be recurrent and ubiquitous in every analysis; firstly, issues around identity, the struggle to know the self, to understand the self and to be the self in an authentic way. Intricately entangled with self-identity is the problem of narcissism, essentially viewed as a defensive retreat to a mental state characterized by an unconscious belief in the special value of the self and the diminution of the Other. However, there are a multitude of inherent anxieties involved in close and intimate relationships. As Freud pointed out, even in our most intimate relationships there is an element of hostility. Threats to both the self and other, and various anxieties around libidinal contact, will be examined in this book using case material, and the relationship between these three important themes, identity, narcissism and the other, separate but interconnected, will be explored.

chapter One|22 pages

The way to identity: an auspicious method?

chapter Two|18 pages

Otherness and the other

chapter Three|15 pages

Narcissism and unconscious phantasy

chapter Five|10 pages

Non-consummation: a narcissistic organisation

chapter Six|14 pages

The other as alien: psychic atopia

chapter Seven|15 pages

Sexuality in psychoanalysis

chapter Eight|19 pages

Negative therapeutic reaction re-examined

chapter Ten|12 pages

Dreams as access to the primal scene