ABSTRACT

In the Shadow of Freud’s Couch: Portraits of Psychoanalysts in Their Offices uses text and images to form a complex portrait of psychoanalysis today. It is the culmination of the authors 15-year project of photographing psychoanalysts in their offices across 27 cities and ten countries.

Part memoir, part history, part case study, and part self-analysis, these pages showcase a diversity of analysts: male and female and old-school and contemporary. Starting with Freud’s iconic office, the book explores how the growing diversity in both analysts and patient groups, and changes in schools of thought have been reflected in these intimate spaces, and how the choices analysts make in their office arrangements can have real effects on treatment. Along with the presentation of images, Mark Gerald explores the powerful relational foundations of theory and clinical technique, the mutually vulnerable patient-analyst connection, and the history of the psychoanalytic office.

This book will be of great interest to psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists, as well as psychotherapists, counsellors, and social workers interested in understanding and innovating the spaces used for mental health treatment. It will also appeal to interior designers, office architects, photographers, and anyone who ever considered entering a psychoanalyst's office.

chapter 1|13 pages

A tale of two offices and two fathers

chapter 3|12 pages

You can take the boy out of the Bronx

chapter 4|13 pages

Photography and psychoanalysis

Two types of memorial art

chapter 5|13 pages

Psychoanalyst as photographic subject

chapter |10 pages

Gallery A

chapter 6|11 pages

The image in psychoanalysis

chapter 7|19 pages

The relational image

Creating a psychoanalytic photographic portrait

chapter 9|14 pages

The crowded office

chapter 10|16 pages

A home office

chapter 11|8 pages

Retaining the shadow in changing times

chapter |10 pages

Gallery B

chapter 12|12 pages

Leaving the office