ABSTRACT

A contemporary, wide-ranging exploration of one of the most provocative topics currently under psychoanalytic investigation: the relationship of dissociation to varieties of knowing and unknowing. The twenty-eight essays collected here invite readers to reflect upon the ways the mind is structured around and through knowing, not-knowing, and sort-of-knowing or uncertainty. The authors explore the ramifications of being up against the limits of what they can know as through their clinical practice, and theoretical considerations, they simultaneously attempt to open up psychic and physical experience. How, they ask, do we tolerate ambiguity and blind spots as we try to know? And how do we make all of this useful to our patients and ourselves? The authors approach these and similar epistemological questions through an impressively wide variety of clinical dilemmas (e.g., the impact of new technologies upon the analytic dyad) and theoretical specialties (e.g., neurobiology).

part I|20 pages

Stalking the Elusive Mutative Experience

chapter ONE|18 pages

The enigma of the transference

part II|41 pages

The Keynote Addresses

part III|69 pages

Dissociation—Clinical, Diagnostic, and Conceptual Perspectives ... from Murder through Abuse to Masochism

part IV|41 pages

When Experience Has a Mind of Its Own

part V|75 pages

How Do We Know and How Does It Change? The Role of Implicit and Explicit Mind/Brain/Body Processes

part VI|43 pages

How Bodies Are Theorized, Exhibited and Struggled with and against: Gender, Embodiment, and the Analyst's Physical Self

part VII|38 pages

I Know Something about You: Working with Extra-Analytic Knowledge in the Analytic Dyad in the Twenty-First Century

part VIII|37 pages

Omissions of Joy

chapter TWENTY FIVE|9 pages

The underbelly of joy

chapter TWENTY SIX|11 pages

The intersubjectivity of joy

chapter TWENTY SEVEN|5 pages

The healing power of joy

A discussion of Chapters 24, 25 and 26