ABSTRACT

Volume 16 of Progress in Self Psychology, How Responsive Should We Be, illuminates the continuing tension between Kohut's emphasis on the patient's subjective experience and the post-Kohutian intersubjectivists' concern with the therapist's own subjectivity by focusing on issues of therapeutic posture and degree of therapist activity. Teicholz provides an integrative context for examining this tension by discussing affect as the common denominator underlying the analyst's empathy, subjectivity, and authenticity. Responses to the tension encompass the stance of intersubjective contextualism, advocacy of "active responsiveness," and emphasis on the thorough-going bidirectionality of the analytic endeavor. Balancing these perspectives are a reprise on Kohut's concept of prolonged empathic immersion and a recasting of the issue of closeness and distance in the analytic relationship in terms of analysis of "the tie to the negative selfobject." Additional clinical contributions examine severe bulimia and suicidal rage as attempts at self-state regulation and address the self-reparative functions that inhere in the act of dreaming. Like previous volumes in the series, volume 16 demonstrates the applicability of self psychology to nonanalytic treatment modalities and clinical populations. Here, self psychology is brought to bear on psychotherapy with placed children, on work with adults with nonverbal learning disabilities, and on brief therapy.  Rector's examination of twinship and religious experience, Hagman's elucidation of the creative process, and Siegel and Topel's experiment with supervision via the internet exemplify the ever-expanding explanatory range of self-psychological insights.

chapter

Introduction

chapter 1|13 pages

From the Kohut Archives

part 1|70 pages

Theoretical

chapter 2|16 pages

Forms of Relatedness

Self-Preservation and the Schizoid Continuum

chapter 3|21 pages

The Analyst's Empathy, Subjectivity, and Authenticity

Affect as the Common Denominator

chapter 5|18 pages

The Development of the Dyad

A Bidirectional Revisioning of Some Self Psychological Concepts

part 2|132 pages

Clinical

chapter 6|15 pages

The Need for Efficacy in the Treatment of Suicidal Patients

Transference and Countertransference Issues

chapter 7|37 pages

eSupervision

Something New Under the Sun

chapter 8|13 pages

Bulimia as Metaphor

Twinship and Play in the Treatment of the Difficult Patient

part 4|48 pages

Critiques

chapter 18|19 pages

Secret Conversations with My Father

The Psychological Dimension of Theoretical Discourse

chapter 19|26 pages

Surviving the Death of Oedipus

Tips for Self Psychologists