ABSTRACT

Volume 26/27 begins with publication of The Annual's  first prize essay, Samuel Abrams's "How Child and Adult Analysis Inform and Misinform One Another."  This is followed by a series of papers originally prepared for a symposium honoring John E. Gedo.  These papers span the clinical topics of obsessiveness, sublimation, dreams and self-analysis, and analyzability,  and also delve into applied psychoanalysis and art history, with two studies of Vincent van Gogh and another of Alberto Giacometti.  These papers not only convey the impressive range of Gedo's own interests, but embody the high scholarly and clinical standards that Gedo has long held, both for himself and for the field in general. 
    
Section III offers original contributions to clinical analysis in the form of the consideration of the role of affective engagement in the analyst's "usability"; thoughtful assessment of the perils of parental projection in child analytic work; and comparison of a failed and successful supervision in the same psychoanalytic case.  Section IV examines psychoanalysis and the arts, with two further studies of van Gogh, an analytic reading of Nabokov's Lolita, and more general examinations of psychoanalysis in relation to dramatic art and film analysis.  The volume closes with two provocative scholarly essays bearing on the roots of psychoanalysis: the correspondence between Mabel Dodge and her analysts Smith Ely Jelliffe and A. A. Brill as a vehicle for reviewing the issue of extra- and postanalytic contact between analyst and patient; and an examination of Freud, Lacan, and the uneasy relationships among literature, psychoanalysis, and the female subject.

Volume 26/27 offers readers a rich harvest of contemporary insights about psychoanalysis, including its history and evolution, its continuing clinical refinement, and its scholarly applications outside the consulting room.

part I|20 pages

The Annual Prize Paper

part II|152 pages

Gedo Symposium Papers

chapter 2|2 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|22 pages

Obsessiveness in Context

chapter 4|11 pages

On Seeing Stars, Halos, and Other Illuminations

Some Speculations about Vincent van Gogh

chapter 5|23 pages

The Self-Portrait as Covert Message

The van Gogh—Gauguin Exchange

chapter 8|15 pages

Analyzability Redux

From “Analyzable” to “Preparable for Analysis”

chapter 9|30 pages

Alberto Giacometti's Woman with Her Throat Cut

Multiple Meanings and Methodology

part III|69 pages

Clinical Psychoanalysis

chapter 10|20 pages

The Usable Analyst

The Role of the Affective Engagement of the Analyst in Reaching Usability

chapter 12|17 pages

The Child Psychoanalyst as Clinician

The Perils of Parental Projection

part IV|88 pages

Psychoanalysis and the Arts

chapter 14|14 pages

Nabokov's Lolita

A Psychoanalytic Study

chapter 17|19 pages

Psychoanalysis as a Dramatic Art

chapter 18|16 pages

From Film as Case Study to Film as Myth

Psychoanalytic Perspectives on the Analysis of Cinema and Culture 1

part V|40 pages

The Roots of Psychoanalysis

chapter 19|28 pages

Letters in Psychoanalysis and Posttermination Contact

Mabel Dodge's Correspondence with Smith Ely Jelliffe and A. A. Brill