ABSTRACT

The Modernity of Sándor Ferenczi provides a concise yet thorough overview of the life and work of Sandor Ferenczi. It seeks to help make his thought and work better known, as a controversial pioneering psychoanalyst whose importance to psychoanalysis has sometimes been wrongfully neglected and relegated to backstage.

Including excerpts from his most important papers, this book gives the reader a clear guide to the major tenets of Ferenczi’s work, the psychoanalytic context in which his significant achievements occurred, and the continued importance of his work for contemporary psychoanalytic theory and clinical practice. Thierry Bokanowski examines Ferenczi’s work in three main stages:

1. A first period of contribution to Freud’s work (1908-1914)

2. A second period of the deployment of Ferenczi’s own thought and work (1914-1925)

3. A third period of calling concepts into question and advancing new concepts (1926-1933)

Bokanowski offers a detailed analysis of these three periods, illustrating them vividly by analysing Ferenczi’s numerous and very famous articles or books during these periods in a way that allows his very original way of thinking to unfold. He then examines at the theoretical level the heritage of Ferenczi’s hypotheses developed across these three time spans.

Covering Ferenczi’s relationship with Freud and with other early psychoanalysts, and his role in formulating well-established concepts such as introjection, countertransference and narcissistic splitting, The Modernity of Sándor Ferenczi provides an essential and accessible read for any student or clinician of psychoanalysis or psychoanalytic psychotherapy seeking to apply Ferenczi’s work in the present and understand the historical development of psychoanalytic ideas.

part I|23 pages

The modernity of Sándor Ferenczi

part II|60 pages

The work

chapter 4|4 pages

‘Introjection and transference’ (1909)

The master stroke

chapter 5|3 pages

‘A little chanticleer’ (1913)

The castration complex: infantile sexual theories and infantile neurosis

chapter 6|6 pages

Thalassa: A Theory of Genitality (1924)

Regression: from origins to the ‘primal’

chapter 8|5 pages

The concept of the ‘wise baby’ (1924–1932)

The infantile, trauma and the asphyxiation of psychic life

chapter 9|18 pages

The Clinical Diary (January–October 1932)

The trauma-splitting pair

part III|25 pages

Choice of texts

chapter |14 pages

Afterword