ABSTRACT

Psychoanalysis is an intimate clinical experience and the concepts that it explores aim to grapple with the specific phenomena that unfold when a patient speaks and an analyst listens. This book aims to give concrete examples of how these concepts take shape when analysts work.

The structure of the contributions presented in this book matches this concern; drawing on a fragment of an analysis, each contribution illustrates how a notion reveals unforeseen perspectives. The list of entries selected is diverse, with notions encountered in international studies since the Second World War prioritised. Certain classical concepts are nonetheless included when their significance has been shaped by the innovative rereading that contemporary authors have made of them. However, not all the entries in this glossary constitute concepts: some correspond to notions, others to intuitions, and even to recurrent situations with which the analyst is confronted. By grounding, in each entry, the theoretical reflection on a clinical case, the reader is lead towards the incessant to-and-fro process which governs the analyst’s reflections from clinical experience to theory.

This book therefore constitutes an essential tool for psychologists, psychoanalysts and all professionals in the field of mental care.

part Part I|174 pages

The Space of the Session

chapter 21|4 pages

A Space for Talking

Acting Through Speech
ByJean-Luc Donnet

chapter |5 pages

Associative Speech, Compulsive Speech

ByLaurent Danon-Boileau

chapter |3 pages

The Adverb Effect

ByJean-Louis Baldacci

chapter |2 pages

Language, A Shell?

ByBrigitte Chervoillot-Courtillon

chapter |4 pages

Jokes

ByJean-Philippe Dubois

chapter |3 pages

The Confusion of Tongues between Adults and the Child

ByBernadette Ferrero-Madignier

chapter |3 pages

Case Histories

ByNicolas DE Coulon

chapter |3 pages

Infans Scriptor

ByJean-Yves Tamet

chapter 2|4 pages

Figures and Forms

The Action Of Form
ByLaurence Kahn

chapter |2 pages

The Figuration of the Transference

ByNicole Oury

chapter |3 pages

The Signifier of Demarcation

ByPatrick Merot

chapter |3 pages

The Pictogram of the Primal

ByMireille Fognini

chapter |3 pages

The Oscillation Between Metaphor and Metonymy

ByPatrick Merot

chapter |3 pages

The Analogy

ByClaire Tremoulet

chapter |3 pages

The Image

ByOlivia Todisco

chapter |3 pages

The Polyphony of Dreams

ByMireille Fognini

chapter |2 pages

Commentary

ByRené Kaës

chapter |3 pages

The Detail

ByClaude Arlès

chapter |3 pages

Projective Identification

ByNicole Oury

chapter |5 pages

The Central Phantasy of Acted Violence

ByRosine Jozef Perelberg

chapter |5 pages

The Beaten Father

ByRosine Jozef-Perelberg

chapter 3|5 pages

Listening

Reverie and Alpha Function
ByMichael Parsons

chapter |3 pages

Negative Capability and Capacity for Reverie

ByRéal Laperrière

chapter |2 pages

The Inner Discourse

ByJean-Yves Tamet

chapter |3 pages

Co-Thinking

ByFelipe Votadoro

chapter |3 pages

The Chimera

ByDominique Tabone-Weil

chapter |3 pages

Paradoxical Thought

ByAlice Bauer, Joseph Torrente

chapter |3 pages

Retrogression

ByAlice Bauer, Torrente Joseph

chapter 4|3 pages

Interpretations

The Decision
ByNicole Oury

chapter |3 pages

Listening to Listening

ByHaydée Faimberg, Laurent Danon-Boileau

chapter |3 pages

Saturated and Unsaturated Interpretations

ByMichael Parsons

chapter |4 pages

Interpretation and Transference

ByDominique Tabone-Weil

chapter |2 pages

The Indexation of Interpretation

ByMichel Ody

chapter |3 pages

Enaction

ByMarie-Laure Léandri

chapter |4 pages

The Violence of Interpretation

ByMireille Fognini

chapter 5|4 pages

The Presence of the Analyst

The Basic Transference
ByLaure Bonnefon-Tort, Vincent Pélissier

chapter |3 pages

The Analyst's Sensitive Presence

ByJacques Press

chapter |5 pages

Primary Seduction

ByNicole Minazio

chapter |3 pages

The Therapist's Maternal Function

ByDiana Tabacof

chapter |3 pages

The Pliable Medium

ByDominique Tabone-Weil

chapter 6|3 pages

The Ordeal of Transferences

The Precession of the Countertransference in Relation to the Transference
ByLaure Bonnefon-Tort

chapter |3 pages

Deferral and the Quiproquo

ByAnne Maupas

chapter |2 pages

The Crisis

ByOlivia Todisco

chapter |3 pages

The Narcissistic Transference

ByAlice Bauer, Joseph Torrente

chapter |3 pages

The Negativity of the Transference

ByNicolas De Coulon

chapter |4 pages

Negative Transferences

ByThierry Bokanowski

chapter |4 pages

Negativising Transferences

ByThierry Bokanowski

chapter 7|4 pages

Frame and Setting

Situation Analysis
ByJean-Luc Donnet

chapter |3 pages

The Tub

ByJean H. Guégan

chapter |3 pages

The Central Laboratory 1

ByLucette Nobs

chapter |3 pages

Changing Location

ByBrigitte Brigitte Dollé-Monglond

chapter |6 pages

The end of An Analysis

ByBrigitte Brigitte Dollé-Monglond

part Part II|162 pages

The Space of the Psyche

chapter 1768|4 pages

Traumatic Experiences

Primitive Agony
ByDominique Tabone-Weil

chapter |4 pages

The Basic Fault

ByDominique Tabone-Weil

chapter |3 pages

Essential Depression

ByMarie Sirjacq

chapter |3 pages

Hot Trauma and Cold Trauma

ByClaude Janin

chapter |3 pages

The Bad Après-Coup

ByRachel Rosenblum

chapter 9|3 pages

Drives

Libidinal Co-Excitation
ByAlice Bauer, Joseph Torrente

chapter |4 pages

The Anarchistic Drive

ByMarie-Françoise Laval-Hygonenq

chapter |3 pages

Mastery

ByLaure Bonnefon-Tort

chapter 10|3 pages

Sexualities

Gender
ByJean-Yves Tamet

chapter |4 pages

Cruelty

ByJean-Michel Hirt

chapter |3 pages

Neo-Sexuality

ByLaure Bonnefon-Tort

chapter |2 pages

The Melancholic Feminine

ByMichel Villand

chapter 11|4 pages

Narcissism

The Skin-Ego
ByPatrice Brunaud

chapter |3 pages

The Psychic Envelope

ByÉVelyne Sechaud

chapter |2 pages

The Partial Object or Objet (a)

ByIsabelle Alfandary

chapter |4 pages

The Narcissistic Contract

ByDominique Tabone-Weil

chapter |3 pages

The Amential Unconscious

ByIsabelle Gernet, Dejours Christophe

chapter |3 pages

Imperfect Separations

ByClaude Arlès

chapter |3 pages

Lived Experience

ByJean-Yves Tamet

chapter 12|3 pages

Otherness

The Relation to the Unknown
ByPatrick Merot

chapter |3 pages

The Site of the Stranger

ByOlivia Todisco

chapter |3 pages

The Mother'S Father

ByJean-Yves Tamet

chapter |3 pages

The Enigmatic Message

ByJean H. Guégan

chapter |3 pages

The Dead Mother

ByLaurent Danon-Boileau

chapter |2 pages

The Freudian Thing

ByIsabelle Alfandary

chapter |4 pages

Incestual and Incestuality

ByJacques Angelergues

chapter |3 pages

The Allergic Object-Relationship

ByMarie Sirjacq

chapter 13|5 pages

Defences

Self-Calming Strategies
ByGérard Szwec

chapter |4 pages

Negative Hallucination

ByVincent Pélissier

chapter |3 pages

Creative Hypochondria

ByJean-Yves Tamet

chapter |3 pages

Functional Splitting

ByGérard Bayle

chapter |3 pages

Diversion Neurosis

ByGérard Bayle

chapter |3 pages

Masochism as the Guardian of Life

ByEvelyne Chauvet

chapter |3 pages

Pre-Psychosis

ByMarie-Laure Léandri

chapter 14|3 pages

Process

The Central Phobic Position
ByDaniel Irago

chapter |3 pages

Psychic Genera

ByVirginia Picchi

chapter |3 pages

Oedipus as an Attractor

ByMichel Ody

chapter |3 pages

Normopathy

ByDominique Tabone-Weil

chapter |4 pages

The Anti-Analysand

ByDominique Tabone-Weil

chapter |4 pages

The Negative Therapeutic Reaction

ByDominique Tabone-Weil

chapter |3 pages

The Dynamic Après-Coup

ByRosine Jozef Perelberg

chapter |3 pages

Recovery

ByLucette Nobs

chapter 15|3 pages

Creation of the Third

The Analytic Third
ByVirginia Picchi

chapter |3 pages

Censorship of the Woman-As-Lover

ByAnne Maupas, Aleth Prudent-Bayle

chapter |3 pages

The Double Taboo on Touching

ByFrançoise Laurent

chapter |3 pages

Refusal

ByClaude Arlès

chapter |3 pages

Ethical Suffering

ByChristophe Demaegdt, Christophe Dejours

chapter |3 pages

Cultural Reference and Anthropological Mediation

ByGilbert Diatkine

chapter |3 pages

Cultural Reference and Seduction

ByGilbert Diatkine

chapter |4 pages

The Work of Culture

ByBrigitte Dollé-Monglond