ABSTRACT

Relational Freedom: Emergent Properties of the Interpersonal Field addresses the interpersonal field in clinical psychoanalysis and psychotherapy, especially the emergent qualities of the field. The book builds on the foundation of unformulated experience, dissociation, and enactment defined and explored in Stern’s previous, widely read books.

Stern never considers the analyst or the patient alone; all clinical events take place between them and involve them both. Their conscious and unconscious conduct and experience are the field’s substance. We can say that the changing nature of the field determines the experience that patient and analyst can create in one another’s presence; but we can also say that the therapeutic dyad, simply by doing their work together, ceaselessly configures and reconfigures the field. "Relational freedom" is Stern’s own interpersonal and relational conception of the field, which he compares, along with other varieties of interpersonal/relational field theory, to the work of Bionian field theorists such as Madeleine and Willy Baranger, and Antonino Ferro. Other chapters concern the role of the field in accessing the frozen experience of trauma, in creating theories of therapeutic technique, evaluating quantitative psychotherapy research, evaluating the utility of the concept of unconscious phantasy, treating the hard-to-engage patient, and in devising the ideal psychoanalytic institute.

Relational Freedom is a clear, authoritative, and impassioned statement of the current state of interpersonal and relational psychoanalytic theory and clinical thinking. It will interest anyone who wants to stay up to date with current developments in American psychoanalysis, and for those newer to the field it will serve as an introduction to many of the important questions in contemporary psychoanalysis. Psychoanalysts and psychotherapists of all kinds will profit from the book’s thoughtful discussions of clinical problems and quandaries.

Donnel B. Stern, Ph.D.., a psychoanalyst and psychotherapist in private practice in New York City, serves as Training and Supervising Analyst at the William Alanson White Institute, and Adjunct Clinical Professor and Consultant at the NYU Postodoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis. He is the founder and editor of "Psychoanalysis in a New Key," a book series published by Routledge.

chapter |34 pages

Introduction

Emergent properties of the interpersonal field

chapter |29 pages

The interpersonal field

Its place in American psychoanalysis

chapter |19 pages

Field theory in psychoanalysis, part I

Comparing Madeleine and Willy Baranger, and Harry Stack Sullivan

chapter |25 pages

Field theory in psychoanalysis, part II

Comparing Bionian field theory and contemporary interpersonal/relational psychoanalysis

chapter |22 pages

Witnessing across time

Accessing the present from the past and the past from the present

chapter |10 pages

Unconscious phantasy and unconscious relatedness

Comparing contemporary Freudian and interpersonal/relational approaches to clinical practice

chapter |19 pages

Psychotherapy is an emergent process

Hermeneutics and quantitative psychotherapy research 1

chapter |14 pages

The hard-to-engage patient

A treatment failure

chapter |13 pages

Curiosity

Dealing with divergent ideas in the ideal psychoanalytic institute