ABSTRACT

Winnicott’s Children focuses on the use we make of the thinking and writing of DW Winnicott; how this has enhanced our understanding of children and the settings where we work, and how it has influenced the way in which we do that work. It is a volume by clinicians, concerned about how, as well as why, we engage with particular children in particular ways.

The book begins with a scholarly and accessible exposition of the place of Winnicott in his time, in relation to his contemporaries – Melanie Klein, Anna Freud, John Bowlby – and the development of his thinking. The dual focus on the earliest experience of the infant and its consequences plus the ‘how’ of engaging with children – as good-enough mothers or good enough therapists – is picked up in the chapters that follow. The role of play is central to a chapter on supervision; struggling through the doldrums can be part of the adolescent’s experience and that of those who engage with him; the role of psychotherapy in a Winnicottian therapeutic community and an inner city secondary school is explored; and a chapter on radio work links us personally with Winnicott and his desire to talk plainly and helpfully to parents.

There is a richness in the collection of subjects in this book, and in the experience of the writers. It will appeal to those who work with children – in child and family mental health settings, schools, hospitals, colleges and social care settings.

chapter |22 pages

Winnicott in his time

part |80 pages

Concepts

chapter |17 pages

Reflections on mirrors

chapter |11 pages

Hate in the counter-transference

Winnicott's contribution to our understanding of hatred in our work as child psychotherapists

chapter |15 pages

Body and soul

Developmental urgency and impasse

part |37 pages

Transitional themes

chapter |18 pages

On psychoanalytic supervision

Avoiding omniscience, encouraging play

chapter |17 pages

Transition and change

An exploration of the resonances between transitional and meditative states of mind and their roles in the therapeutic process

part |62 pages

The outside world

chapter |14 pages

Spaces for growth

Where milieu therapy and psychotherapy meet

chapter |14 pages

A Word in Your Ear

Winnicott on the Radio

chapter |17 pages

On delinquency