ABSTRACT

Most accounts of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy have been written by therapists, from a professional point of view. May such accounts alone be an authentic history of what occurred between the therapist and the patient? Would the patients’ accounts be as valid as those of the therapists? In this book the published stories of several analysands, some of Freud and Jung, over one hundred years have been collected for purposes of comparison; some have been written by therapists in training, but others are by patients not involved in the profession. A number are complaints about malpractice, or of failures to make a difference to their condition, and a common factor in most has been a discordant agenda between analyst and analysand. Where analysands have felt that they have gained transforming benefit from the therapy, those gains are frequently ascribed to the relationship with the therapist, rather than the practice or technique which they may have criticized. Collected together they make stimulating reading and raise interesting issues about the nature of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy, and the healing function of the process.

part 1|47 pages

Two Contrasting Stories

chapter One|3 pages

Prelude

chapter Two|21 pages

Marie Cardinal

chapter Three|13 pages

Rosie Alexander

chapter Four|5 pages

Discussion

part II|103 pages

Patients of Freud and Jung Write

chapter Five|7 pages

Prelude

chapter Six|21 pages

The Wolf-Man

chapter Seven|23 pages

HD (Hilda Doolittle)

chapter Eight|13 pages

Dr Joseph Wortis

chapter Nine|24 pages

Catherine Rush Cabot

chapter Ten|9 pages

Discussion

part III|83 pages

Patients in Training as Psychoanalysts or Psychotherapists

chapter Eleven|3 pages

Prelude

chapter Twelve|10 pages

A. Kardiner

chapter Thirteen|15 pages

Smiley Blanton

chapter Fourteen|12 pages

Dr Margaret I. Little

chapter Fifteen|15 pages

Jeffrey Masson

chapter Sixteen|18 pages

Harry Guntrip, John Hill, and Arthur Couch

chapter Seventeen|5 pages

Discussion

part IV|19 pages

Two Ungratified Patients

chapter Eighteen|2 pages

Prelude

chapter Nineteen|9 pages

Wynne Godley and Stuart Sutherland

chapter Twenty|5 pages

Discussion

part V|35 pages

Finally

chapter Twenty-One|33 pages

Concluding