ABSTRACT

Clinical psychoanalysis serves as our best laboratory for exploring the riddle of what it is to be a person, and how a person is at once singularly unique while always a piece of the interpersonal fabric of humanity. In Intimacy and Separateness in Psychoanalysis, Warren Poland casts a freshly erudite eye on this paradox, resisting individual or intersubjective bias and avoiding the parochial allegiances common in our age of pluralism.

Poland combines vivid reports from clinical analyses, literary readings, and his own life – all unfolding original observations on a person as both a part of and apart from human commonality. His consideration of how one person’s witnessing facilitates another’s self-definition, a concept extended here in his study of outsiderness as part of human nature, has been marked a keynote contribution. Clinical illustrations of moments that matter but are usually omitted from public presentation are set alongside examples of reading powerful fiction to show how analyst and author both incite fresh openness in a person’s mind. Poland goes farther, exposing the personal power of union and separateness in its keenest form, facing the ultimate separation of one’s own actual death.

Only with separateness can true intimacy grow, and only within the fabric of others can true individuality exist. This evocative book, ranging from the lightness of whimsy to the dread of dying, allows every reader to taste of and learn from Poland’s thinking. Psychoanalyst or patient, writer or reader, each one living one’s own life – all can find new understandings in this work.

part I|12 pages

Opening conclusions

chapter 1|6 pages

Regarding the other

chapter 2|4 pages

Rather my own shortcomings

part II|72 pages

The psychoanalytic situation

chapter 3|15 pages

The analyst’s witnessing and otherness

chapter 4|16 pages

Outsiderness in human nature

chapter 5|14 pages

The interpretive attitude

chapter 7|12 pages

The analyst’s fears

part III|32 pages

Challenges within the psychoanalytic process

chapter 8|13 pages

Problems in pluralism

Narcissism and curiosity

chapter 9|2 pages

On immediacy

“Vivid contrast between past and present”

chapter 10|6 pages

The limits of empathy

chapter 11|5 pages

Beyond bedrock

The trap of abandoning psychology

chapter 12|4 pages

Oedipal complexes, oedipal schema

part IV|33 pages

Beyond the clinical setting

chapter 13|15 pages

Reading fiction and the psychoanalytic experience

Proust on reading and on reading Proust

chapter 14|3 pages

Psychoanalysis and culture

chapter 15|5 pages

The mind beyond conflict

Whimsy

chapter 16|4 pages

Pathologizing mental processes

Whimsy

chapter 17|4 pages

Polymorphously normal sexuality

part V|19 pages

Endings in poetry, psychoanalysis, and life

chapter 19|7 pages

Ephemera

Unfinished thoughts on endings and death

chapter 20|7 pages

Slouching towards mortality

Thoughts on time and death