ABSTRACT

Intersubjective Self Psychology: A Primer offers a comprehensive overview of the theory of Intersubjective Self Psychology and its clinical applications. Readers will gain an in depth understanding of one of the most clinically relevant analytic theories of the past half-century, fully updated and informed by recent discoveries and developments in the field of Intersubjectivity Theory. Most importantly, the volume provides detailed chapters on the clinical treatment principles of Intersubjective Self Psychology and their application to a variety of clinical situations and diagnostic categories such as trauma, addiction, mourning, child therapy, couples treatment, sexuality, suicide and sever pathology. This useful clinical tool will support and inform everyday psychotherapeutic work.

Retaining Kohut’s emphasis on the self and selfobject experience, the book conceptualizes the therapeutic situation as a bi-directional field of needed and dreaded selfobject experiences of both patient and analyst. Through a rigorous application of the ISP model, each chapter sheds light on the complex dynamic field within which self-experience and selfobject experience of patient and analyst/therapist unfold and are sustained. The ISP perspective allows the therapist to focus on the patient’s strengths, referred to as the Leading Edge, without neglecting work with the repetitive transferences, or Trailing Edge. This dual focus makes ISP a powerful agent for transformation and growth.

Intersubjective Self Psychology provides a unified and comprehensive model of psychological life with specific, practical applications that are clinically informative and therapeutically powerful. The book represents a highly useful resource for psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists around the world.

part Section 1|2 pages

The theory and practice of Intersubjective Self Psychology

chapter 6|11 pages

Working with the trailing edge

Resolving the fear of repetition

chapter 7|17 pages

Working with the leading edge

When the selfobject tie is intact

part Section 2|2 pages

Clinical applications

chapter 8|14 pages

Melancholia revisited

99Depression and its treatment from the perspective of Intersubjective Self Psychology

chapter 9|18 pages

Addiction

An intersubjective self psychological perspective

chapter 10|10 pages

Child treatment

Working with the leading and trailing edge

chapter 12|16 pages

Sexuality and Intersubjective Self Psychology

What matters

chapter 13|11 pages

A suicidal patient

Gasping for air