ABSTRACT

Hidden Conversations introduces Robert Langs radical reinterpretation of psychoanalysis by presenting and expanding his ideas in new and accessible ways. It is the first clear account of the theories underlying Langs approach, placing them within the context of the history of psychoanalysis and showing, for example, that Freud nearly discovered the communicative approach in the late 1890s, and that in the 1930s Ferenczi also anticipated the method. David Livingstone Smith illustrates this communicative approach with a wealth of practical detail and clinical examples, including verbatim accounts of communicative psychoanalytical sessions with a commentary on the unconscious processes underlying them.

part I|106 pages

The psychoanalytic background

chapter 1|22 pages

Seduction

chapter 2|27 pages

The distorting mirror

chapter 3|27 pages

An unimaginable substratum

chapter 4|28 pages

Some pioneers

part II|143 pages

The communicative paradigm

chapter 5|23 pages

Psychotherapy exposed

chapter 6|32 pages

Hidden conversations

chapter 7|28 pages

The limit situation

chapter 9|18 pages

Two communicative sessions

chapter 10|13 pages

Toward a new science of psychoanalysis