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The Winnicott Tradition
DOI link for The Winnicott Tradition
The Winnicott Tradition book
Lines of Development—Evolution of Theory and Practice over the Decades
The Winnicott Tradition
DOI link for The Winnicott Tradition
The Winnicott Tradition book
Lines of Development—Evolution of Theory and Practice over the Decades
Edited ByMargaret Boyle Spelman, Frances Thomson-Salo
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2015
eBook Published 31 May 2019
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
Pages 432
eBook ISBN 9780429483769
Subjects Behavioral Sciences
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Boyle Spelman, M., & Thomson-Salo, F. (Eds.). (2015). The Winnicott Tradition: Lines of Development—Evolution of Theory and Practice over the Decades (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429483769
ABSTRACT
This book includes articles that describe how Winnicott's thinking facilitates the building of bridges between the internal and external realities, and, outside the boundaries of psychoanalysis as well as within it, between different schools of thought.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|114 pages
Winnicott: His Work and Legacy
chapter Two|20 pages
Winnicott’s constant search for the life that feels real
ByJames William Anderson
chapter Three|8 pages
“People who think in pictures”: the continuing dialogue between Marion Milner and Donald Winnicott in Bothered by Alligators
ByEmma Letley
chapter Four|13 pages
Unassimilated aggression and the emergence of the unit self: Winnicott, Jung, and Matte Blanco
ByWilliam Meredith-Owen
chapter Six|16 pages
Winnicott’s anni horribiles: the biographical roots of “Hate in the counter-transference”
ByBrett Kahr
chapter Eight|18 pages
A measure of agreement: an exploration of the relationship of Winnicott and Phyllis Greenacre*
ByNellie L. Thompson
part II|138 pages
Clinical Work and Applications of Winnicott’s Tradition
chapter Eleven|10 pages
The paternal function in Winnicott: the psychoanalytical frame, becoming human*
ByHaydée Faimberg
chapter Twelve|14 pages
“Where we start from”: thinking with Winnicott and Lacan about the care of homeless adults
ByDeborah Anna Luepnitz
chapter Thirteen|12 pages
Seeing and being seen: the psychodynamics of pornography through the lens of Winnicott’s thought
ByJohn Woods
chapter Fourteen|10 pages
The isolate and the stranger: Winnicott’s model of subjectivity and its implications for theory and technique
ByJames Rose
chapter Fifteen|9 pages
Hatred and helping: working with our own fear and narcissistic rage*
ByPeter Wilson
chapter Sixteen|11 pages
“I feel that you are introducing a big problem. I never became human. I have missed it”*
ByLesley Caldwell
chapter Seventeen|14 pages
The analyst’s oscillating between interpreting and not interpreting: a peculiar Winnicottian point of view on interpreting and not interpreting
ByVincenzo Bonaminio
chapter Eighteen|16 pages
Maternal perinatal mental illness: the baby’s unexperienced breakdown
ByAngela Joyce
chapter Nineteen|16 pages
Mind the gap: dysynchrony in the writings of Winnicott and associated clinical thoughts
ByAlexandra M. Harrison
part III|106 pages
Specialised Work in the Winnicott Tradition
chapter Twenty|14 pages
The importance of being seen: Winnicott, dance movement psychotherapy, and the embodied experience*
BySuzi Tortora
chapter Twenty-Five|12 pages
Ways of being: transitional objects and the work of art
ByElizabeth Presa
chapter Twenty-Six|13 pages
Unintegrated states and the process of integration: a new formulation*
ByChristopher Reeves
chapter Twenty-Eight|4 pages
“Oedipus, schmedipus: so long as he loves his mother”: teaching Winnicott to a non-analytic audience
ByBernard Barnett
part IV|32 pages
Personal and Theoretical Reflections from Clinicians
chapter Twenty-Nine|8 pages
Two pioneers in the history of infant mental health: Winnicott and Bowlby
ByEric Rayner
chapter Thirty-One|9 pages
Anna Freud and Winnicott: developmental stages, aggression, and infantile sexuality
ByElisabeth Young-Bruehl