ABSTRACT

From its very inception, psychoanalysis has been a discipline encompassing two contradictory tendencies. This dualistic tendency – tradition alongside disenchantment and the will to improve knowledge – is likely responsible for psychoanalysis’s powerful capacity to survive. In Innovations in Psychoanalysis: Originality, Development, Progress, Aner Govrin and Jon Mills bring together the most eminent and diverse psychoanalysts to reflect upon the evolution, vitality, and richness of psychoanalysis today.

Psychoanalysis is undergoing significant transformations involving the entire spectrum of disciplinary differences. This book illuminates these transformations, importantly revealing the innovations in technique, the evolving understanding of theory within existing schools of thought, the need for empirical resurgence, innovations in infant research, neuropsychoanalysis, in the development of new interventions and methods of treatment, and in philosophical and metatheoretical paradigms. Uniquely bringing together psychoanalysts representing different fields of expertise, the contributors answer two questions in this collection of ground-breaking essays: "What are the most important developments in psychoanalysis today?" and "What impact has your chosen perspective had on conducting psychoanalytic treatment?" Their thought-provoking and challenging answers are essential for anyone who wants to fully understand the field of psychoanalysis in our changing, current world.

Innovations in Psychoanalysis brings a whole array of differing schools of thought in dialogue with one another and will be of interest to psychoanalysts, psychologists, psychotherapists, philosophers, and historians of the behavioral sciences worldwide.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 1|28 pages

Contemporary Freudian theory

Perspectives on synthetic ego functions and the paradox of punishment fantasies

chapter Chapter 2|13 pages

The most innovative ideas in psychoanalysis

A Kleinian approach

chapter Chapter 3|23 pages

Cultural complexes in the psyche of individuals and groups

Revisioning analytical psychology from within

chapter Chapter 4|25 pages

The subject in the age of world-formation (mondialisation)

Advances in Lacanian theory from the Québec Group

chapter Chapter 5|19 pages

Existential psychoanalysis

The role of freedom in the clinical encounter

chapter Chapter 6|18 pages

Moving forward

New findings on the right brain and their implications for psychoanalysis

chapter Chapter 8|19 pages

Relational self-psychology

A contemporary self-psychological approach to the practice of psychoanalysis

chapter Chapter 9|19 pages

Relational psychoanalysis

Origins, scope, and recent innovations

chapter Chapter 10|17 pages

Phenomenology speaks

From intersubjectivity to the ethical turn

chapter Chapter 12|22 pages

Bodies and screen relations

Moving treatment from wishful thinking to informed decision-making