ABSTRACT

Toward a Theory of Child-Centered Psychodynamic Family Treatment: The Anna Ornstein Reader offers a clear introduction to Anna Ornstein’s ground-breaking work on psychoanalytic child orientated family therapy. Drawing on her writing from across her long career and including new material, the book sets out her important theoretical work on the mind, self, development, and parental influences, and the therapeutic consequences of these concepts.

Anna Ornstein’s self-psychological work is unique and outstanding. First published in 1974, a time when attachment and affect regulation theory had just started, Ornstein’s work has developed far-reaching ideas, therapeutic concepts, and practicable approaches for psychodynamic children and adolescence therapy, based on the concept of analytic self-psychology, which has anticipated very early results of later affect regulation and attachment research. This kind of treatment considers parental work not as only accompanying, but as central, representing the core of the treatment process. The parental maturation process is directly described, which should enable the parents to accompany their child empathically, and therefore attachment-security enhancing. This treatment concept integrates the later findings of neurobiologically-based attachment and affect regulation theory which emphasizes that intrapsychic and interpersonal experience are in a continuous and everlasting exchange. In this book, Eva Rass offers a better understanding of Ornstein’s approach, an insight into her life and work, and an introduction into the concept of analytic self psychology, followed by a selection of Ornstein’s significant publications, in which the central concern is clearly elaborated, to give the reader a thorough introduction and understanding of her work.

This book will be of great value and interest to professionals working with children and families in psychoanalytic settings, and to students training in child psychoanalysis, psychotherapy, and family therapy.

 

 

chapter 1|3 pages

Introduction

chapter 5|44 pages

Parenting as a function of the adult self

A psychoanalytic developmental perspective

chapter 6|9 pages

Anne and Vivienne

The early adolescence of two young teenagers

chapter 7|17 pages

Little Hans

His phobia and his Oedipus complex (“The Analysis of a Phobia in a Five-Year-Old Boy,” 1909)

chapter 8|12 pages

Changing patterns in parenting

Comments on the origin and consequences of unmodified grandiosity

chapter 9|10 pages

Child-centered family treatment

Conceptual framework and clinical implications

chapter 10|13 pages

Early childhood traumata

Adult reorganization

chapter 11|4 pages

Closing remarks