ABSTRACT

This book brings together an engaging study, using Emmanuel Ghent’s collected papers, of theoretical and personal origins of the relational turn in psychoanalysis. Emmanuel Ghent was one of the founders of relational psychoanalysis, and his ideas have been hugely influential. However, he published sparingly and his papers are scattered across a range of sources. In this book, his key writings are reproduced, along with analyses and critiques by major contemporary psychoanalytic figures such as Adam Phillips, Jessica Benjamin, Seth Warren, Adrienne Harris and Barry Magrid.

This book provides a thorough examination of the key tenets of Ghent’s thinking and illustrates the continued importance of his theoretical and clinical work for the next generation of psychoanalysts.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

part |183 pages

Core papers and commentaries

chapter |40 pages

Credo

The dialectics of one-person and two-person psychologies 1

chapter |6 pages

Surrender and self-discovery

Ghent’s reflections on the “force for growth” and what impedes it

chapter |6 pages

Medicine Man(nie)

Commentary on Emmanuel Ghent’s “Paradox and Process”

chapter |23 pages

Paradox and process

chapter |13 pages

Interaction in the psychoanalytic situation 1

Ghent’s reflections on the “force for growth” and what impedes it

chapter |41 pages

Wish, need, drive

Motive in the light of dynamic systems theory and Edelman’s selectionist theory 1

part |35 pages

Early writings

chapter |20 pages

Psyche and eye 1

chapter |13 pages

Countertransference

Its reflection in the process of peer-group supervision 1 2 3

part |11 pages

In Ghent’s words

chapter |4 pages

Relations

Introduction to the first IARPP Conference 1

chapter |5 pages

On Relational Psychoanalysis

An Interview with Dr Emmanuel Ghent/Interviewer: Lewis Aron

part |22 pages

Reminiscences

chapter |2 pages

The years with Ghent

Ghent’s reflections on the “force for growth” and what impedes it

chapter |2 pages

Impressions of Mannie

chapter |10 pages

Heart melts forward

Emmanuel Ghent (1925–2003)

chapter |21 pages

Afterword

On what we need: A celebration of the work of Emmanuel Ghent