ABSTRACT

The Psychoanalyst and the Child explores the unique nature of psychoanalytic work with children. This book is based on more than 30 years of practice and reflection within the framework of the Alfred Binet Centre in Paris, France. The very great diversity of situations encountered at the Centre brings the issue of therapeutic indications to the forefront.

Michel Ody focuses on the diversification of fifteen clinical situations and their theorization, ranging from basic consultation to psychoanalytic treatment. With this framework as his starting-point, he looks at the common features between the therapeutic consultation – a consultation that becomes therapeutic – and the analytic treatment, as well as what differentiates them. This implies examining, at the technical level, the different forms of interventions and interpretations presented as well as their metapsychological articulation. Ody draws on decades of clinical expertise to set out not just the basic considerations and problems typically encountered in work with this patient group, but clear guidelines for methodology and technique.

Psychoanalysis can be an intellectual process, dependent on the ability of the patient to express themselves verbally, which can make working clinically with children challenging. The Psychoanalyst and the Child seeks to help psychoanalysts through the most challenging of clinical treatments with this patient group.

chapter |11 pages

General Introduction

part I|76 pages

The Therapeutic Consultation

chapter Chapter One|26 pages

Psychoanalytic work with the child: basic reflections

chapter Chapter Two|48 pages

Clinical experience of the movements of psychic life

part II|98 pages

Methodology and Technique

chapter Chapter Three|41 pages

Movements and settings of the therapeutic space

chapter Chapter Four|38 pages

Work of interpretation

chapter |24 pages

Conclusion 1