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1.
J Clin Psychol ; 80(4): 871-883, 2024 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37847856

RESUMEN

Homework assignments, or specific tasks patients are asked to engage in or complete between sessions, are a controversial topic among psychoanalysts. While many argue these interventions contradict psychoanalytic principles, others believe they can help address problems and promote coping skills. We propose that homework can be a legitimate aspect of relational psychoanalysis when used in a way that is attuned to the patient's experience and that homework may be an important component of treating personality disorders (PD). We present the case of a man diagnosed with narcissistic PD. He often felt superior to and reported that he despised others, though the core self-image was of fragile. He embraced the role of the omnipotent caregiver, which came with boredom and anger and lack of satisfaction in his social life. The patient tried to control therapy, asserting that he could psychoanalyze himself. As a result, therapy was stalled and progress was limited. At this point, the therapist asked him to complete homework assignments that encouraged him to refrain from his compulsive caregiving to better understand what motivated this behavior. Through this process, the patient came to realize he acted out of avoidance, as he did not want to disclose his own vulnerabilities and flaws. At that point he was able to experience relationships while adopting different stances and finding new meanings. We argue that homework can be fully integrated into the relational psychoanalytic repertoire to improve self-reflection and foster change in patients with PD.


Asunto(s)
Psicoanálisis , Terapia Psicoanalítica , Masculino , Humanos , Trastorno de Personalidad Narcisista , Trastornos de la Personalidad/terapia , Autoimagen
2.
J Hist Biol ; 57(3): 403-422, 2024 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39212879

RESUMEN

There's something strange about Freud's Civilization and its Discontents (1930). Biologically, Freud was a Neo-Lamarckian, who believed in both the modification of organisms through need and the inheritance of acquired characteristics. However, in Civilization, Freud argued that because human nature is immutable, society has dim odds of improving substantially. Lamarckians, of course, rejected that any species-nature is immutable, as species can always be transformed via the inheritance of acquired characteristics. In fact, many of Freud's Viennese contemporaries-such as Wilhelm Reich, Julius Tandler, and Paul Kammerer-took their Lamarckism to license precisely the sorts of radical social projects Freud deemed impossible. Thus the Freud of Civilization helped himself to a rigid view of human nature which, given his associated biological views, he seemingly ought to have rejected. In this paper, I explain this apparent inconsistency, and suggest Freud resolved it in the following way: Freud was not merely a Lamarckian, but also a strong and peculiar kind of recapitulationist, who believed stages of psychological development both recapitulate phylogeny, and "remain with us" throughout both individual lives and future species-history. I suggest Freud's recapitulationism supposed a certain inertia: what occurred in phylogenetic history cannot un-occur, and therefore there are aspects of our nature which we cannot un-acquire. In this way, Freud reached a rigid conception of human nature despite his Lamarckism.


Asunto(s)
Teoría Freudiana , Características Humanas , Humanos , Historia del Siglo XX , Teoría Freudiana/historia , Herencia , Civilización/historia , Psicoanálisis/historia , Evolución Biológica
3.
J Psycholinguist Res ; 53(3): 40, 2024 Apr 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38678500

RESUMEN

The aim of the study is to analyse contemporary postmodern literary works of Kazakhstan through the conceptual prism of Freudian and Jungian psychoanalysis. To achieve research goals, the following methods were used: axiomatic, content analysis, and comparative. The results of the study determined that contemporary Kazakh writers characterise a large field of motives and ideas that are revealed through text, symbols, and characters. Strong tools for their interpretation were the psychological approaches of Freud and Jung, which are the standards of psychoanalysis and have their own specific features of semantic content. Content analysis of postmodern materials has established that Kazakh stories trace the motives of mythology, religion, relationships and inner spiritual development, which consider the mental differences of the heroes of the storylines. During the psychoanalysis of the works, it was emphasised that postmodernism in the literature of Kazakhstan reflects the rejection of absolute truths, blurring the boundaries between genres, playing with traditional forms and content. Many of the characters in the stories are experiencing an identity crisis, which has been analysed through the Freudian triad and Jung's archetypal images. Kazakh literature, being woven into the cultural and historical heritage of the nation, reflects the features of mentality, socio-cultural transformations, identity and spiritual quest of heroes.


Asunto(s)
Psicoanálisis , Humanos , Kazajstán , Psicoanálisis/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Literatura
4.
J Hist Behav Sci ; 60(1): e22289, 2024 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37851361

RESUMEN

The primary aim of this article is to give a more detailed exposition of the cultural, personal, and theoretical contexts in which the Viennese psychoanalyst, Herbert Silberer's theories were born. When assessing the broader picture that this approach offers, it can be concluded that Silberer was an innovative thinker who inspired several of his contemporaries. Recognized in many respects by the society and scholars of this time, he represented quite a different viewpoint that was significantly influenced by several forms of Western esoteric thinking. Yet his main aim was to contribute to the field of psychoanalysis and develop a theory in which rationalistic psychoanalytic interpretations were combined with nonreductive approaches to mystical experiences. Silberer's name is frequently mentioned in a specific context in which his tragic suicide is emphasized rather than his innovations. Upon evaluating the materials recording Silberer's private life, it seems very likely that his suicide was not triggered by the criticism of Freud alone. Silberer's family affairs, his relationship with his father, and his financial and professional struggles could have all contributed to his tragic decision. This paper contends that Silberer's oeuvre deserves greater attention and must be evaluated based upon its own merit.


Asunto(s)
Psicoanálisis , Humanos , Psicoanálisis/historia , Interpretación Psicoanalítica
5.
J Hist Behav Sci ; 60(1): e22293, 2024 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38071451

RESUMEN

A large literature has formed around the question of how Freud's Jewishness and/or Judaism influenced his psychological discoveries and development of psychoanalytic theory and methods. The article organizes the literature into several core theses but brings new clarity and insight by applying two essential criteria to demonstrate an impact of Judaism on Freud's thinking: direct content and historical timing. First, there should be evidence that Freud incorporated actual content from Jewish sources, and second, this incorporation must have occurred during the most crucial period of Freud's early discovery, conceptualization, and development of psychoanalysis, roughly 1893-1910. Thus, for example, Bakan's well-known theory that Freud studied Kabbala is completely negated by the absence of any evidence in the required time period. Part I reviews the literature on the influence of Freud's ethnic/cultural Jewish identity. Part II introduces the Judaic sacred literature, explores Freud's education in Judaism and Hebrew, and presents evidence that Freud had the motive, means, and resources to discover and draw from the "Dream Segment" of the Talmud-along with the traditional Judaic methods and techniques of textual exegesis. Freud then applied these same Judaic word-centered interpretive methods-used for revealing an invisible God-to revealing an invisible Unconscious in four successive books in 1900, 1901, and 1905.


Asunto(s)
Judaísmo , Psicoanálisis , Humanos , Teoría Freudiana/historia , Judíos , Teoría Psicoanalítica , Psicoanálisis/historia
6.
J Hist Behav Sci ; 60(1): e22277, 2024 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37367638

RESUMEN

The development of the concept of dreams in interwar Polish psychiatry and psychology was influenced by Western European concepts as well as by sociocultural factors of the newly independent state. Few Polish psychiatrists addressed the subject of dreams. They were influenced mainly by Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic concept of dreams, but also by Alferd Adler's, Carl Gustav Jung's, and Wilhelm Stekel's ideas. Nevertheless, they approached psychoanalysis critically. The most comprehensive concept of dreams in Polish psychiatry was oneiroanalysis by Tadeusz Bilikiewicz. Oneironalysis was a method of dream analysis based on psychoanalysis but it rejected the psychoanalytic method of free associations and challenged psychoanalytic approaches to the interpretation of dream symbols. Polish psychologists were even less interested in dreams than psychiatrists. Problems with dreams, the most elaborate psychological work by Stefan Szuman consisted of an outline of epistemological problems with general theories of dreams and a harsh critique of psychoanalysis. The neglect of the subject of dreams in Polish psychiatric society can be seen as connected with the social and professional reception of psychoanalysis in Poland. Psychoanalysis was met with opposition from conservative scholars and publicists presenting nationalistic and anti-Semitic attitudes. It was also criticized by the biologically oriented majority of psychiatrists of the Polish Psychiatric Association. In the case of psychology, the most influential Polish psychological school, Lvov-Warsaw School, promoted Brentanian intentionalism, introspection, and psychology of consciousness, therefore, leading to psychologists' reluctance to explore unconscious states like dreams.


Asunto(s)
Psicoanálisis , Terapia Psicoanalítica , Humanos , Interpretación Psicoanalítica , Polonia , Sueños/psicología
7.
Hist Psychiatry ; 35(1): 62-84, 2024 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38265041

RESUMEN

In 1957, the British-Indian child psychiatrist Dr Elwyn James Anthony travelled to the Zurich International Congress of Psychiatry to show a film featuring 70 children with such complex symptomatology and behaviour that they betrayed the certainty of contemporary theories of developmental psychology and psychoanalysis. This article examines the significance of Anthony's film to the creation of new scientific models in international developmental psychology and psychiatric epidemiology. It marked a significant change in the use of filmed evidence that sought to create a truly global and universalist approach to atypical child development based purely on scientific observations. This new observational work was important in shaping new internationally ratified models to study the epidemiology of children's psychiatric conditions.


Asunto(s)
Trastornos Mentales , Psiquiatría , Psicoanálisis , Niño , Humanos , Desarrollo Infantil
8.
J Hist Behav Sci ; 60(4): e22328, 2024 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39314196

RESUMEN

This study investigates the development of concepts of psychosis in the Jewish Hospital in Warsaw, within the context of social and historical processes to which the hospital was the subject and a broader scope of European concepts of psychosis. In the years 1898-1909, the first chief physician of the psychiatric ward, Adam Wizel, focused mainly on hysteria. The interest in psychoses was initiated by Maurycy Bornsztajn, who started to promote psychoanalytic ideas. The second decade of the functioning of the Jewish Hospital's psychiatric ward was marked by issues concerning the classification of psychoses. In the third decade, after Poland regained independence, psychosis became the main focus of the hospital's staff. Newly appointed psychiatrists, Gustaw Bychowski and Wladyslaw Matecki, contributed substantially to the psychoanalytic understanding of psychosis. Bornsztajn continued to develop his psychoanalytically based concept of psychosis. Wizel changed his attitude toward psychoanalysis and acknowledged the importance of Freud's discoveries. Wladyslaw Sterling contributed to the biological understanding of schizophrenia. In the last period, 1931-1943, the Jewish Hospital in Warsaw struggled with the consequences of the economic crisis in Poland, Wizel's death, and Bychowski's departure, which resulted in the reduced number of publications in the field of psychosis. Nevertheless, Bornsztajn managed to further develop his concept of somatopsychic schizophrenia and Matecki introduced the category of pseudo-neurotic schizophrenia. The psychoanalytic approach developed by Wizel, Bornsztajn, Bychowski, and Matecki was supplemented with other influences, especially phenomenology. Wizel, Bychowski, and Matecki were advocates of the psychoanalytic psychotherapy of psychotic patients.


Asunto(s)
Trastornos Psicóticos , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Polonia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Trastornos Psicóticos/historia , Psicoanálisis/historia , Hospitales Psiquiátricos/historia , Judíos/historia , Judíos/psicología , Psiquiatría/historia
9.
Am J Psychoanal ; 84(3): 439-453, 2024 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39103519

RESUMEN

From the perspective of a poet and first-year psychoanalytic training candidate, this paper develops Jeremy Safran's ideas about the dialectic between psychoanalysis and Buddhism by drawing an analogy between their processes and those of a poetry practice to define an alternative to pathological dissociation under capitalist systems of value. The paper details the writer's experience of working a day job in an office and the pathological dissociation which she subsequently attempts to overcome and critique through writing poetry. Various poems written at work are shared and analyzed as evidence. Drawing from Safran's edited volume, Psychoanalysis and Buddhism, the author then identifies aspects of Zen Buddhist meditation practice and the psychoanalytic process that focus on connecting with reality, however conflicted, as opposed to escaping it. This paper was written under the mentorship of the psychoanalyst and Zen teacher Barry Magid.


Asunto(s)
Budismo , Psicoanálisis , Humanos , Psicoanálisis/historia , Poesía como Asunto , Teoría Psicoanalítica
10.
Am J Psychoanal ; 84(3): 393-401, 2024 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39143196

RESUMEN

The following is a meditative reflection on an anecdote from Jeremy Safran's Psychoanalysis and Buddhism. Moving through Safran's description of an important moment in his development as a student of Buddhism, the author weaves images, practices, and ways of being and feeling into an homage to Safran's legacy integrating psychoanalytic and Buddhist praxis and epistemology.


Asunto(s)
Budismo , Psicoanálisis , Humanos , Psicoanálisis/historia , Teoría Psicoanalítica
11.
Am J Psychoanal ; 84(1): 79-93, 2024 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38454112

RESUMEN

This paper presents and discusses two sets of theories concerning trauma. The first involves a contemporary social theory of "cultural trauma" and the second refers to psychoanalytic theories on psychic trauma. We argue that these two groups of theories have some relevant elements in common, despite social theorists' critique of psychoanalytic understanding on the matter. In our view, the most important meeting points between these groups of theories concern (a) the possibility to think that trauma is not welded to events but has a formation process, one of attribution of meaning, (b) that this process has a temporality of its own, and (c) that the environment (the objects, actors, and agents that compose it) has a fundamental and determinant role in trauma formation. Further, we suggest that trauma is still an open concept in psychoanalysis.


Asunto(s)
Psicoanálisis , Terapia Psicoanalítica , Humanos , Teoría Psicoanalítica
12.
Am J Psychoanal ; 84(1): 1-15, 2024 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38461336

RESUMEN

Three links between poetry and psychoanalysis are highlighted in this paper. These refer to the presence, in the clinical hour, of (i) poetic sentiment, (ii) poetic speech, and (iii) poetic specimen. Each is elucidated in detail and with the help of socio-clinical vignettes. The aim of the paper is to demonstrate that, through the affirmative holding and partial unmasking of the instinctual-epistemic conflation in verse and free-association, both poetry and psychoanalysis seek to transform the private into shared, the hideous into elegant, and the unfathomable into accessible.


Asunto(s)
Psicoanálisis , Habla , Humanos , Asociación Libre , Actitud
13.
Am J Psychoanal ; 84(3): 414-438, 2024 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39103516

RESUMEN

The sense of agency, our felt sense of authorship for our actions, is a difficult concept to define, yet its faltering stands at the heart of psychopathology. Historically undertheorized by psychoanalysis and typically positioned opposite relatedness by clinical psychology, Jeremy Safran conceived of agency and relatedness as paradoxically related. This paper pays tribute to Safran's ideas by taking his writings on agency as a starting point to elaborate how agency forms, and goes awry, in the relational crucible of early life. In doing so, the paper draws on the developmental theory of Winnicott, empirical research on embodied agency from adjacent fields of study, and Safran's clinical phenomenology.


Asunto(s)
Psicoanálisis , Teoría Psicoanalítica , Humanos , Psicoanálisis/historia , Historia del Siglo XX
14.
Am J Psychoanal ; 84(3): 460-465, 2024 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39107498

RESUMEN

The author reflects on how his relationship with Jeremy Safran during graduate school continues to inform his thinking around pedagogy and clinical training. Safran's emphasis on independent inquiry is highlighted, especially regarding the importance of seeking out perspectives and evidence that come into conflict with one's primary orientation. The author argues that Safran's pedagogical stance could be described as inhabiting a state of "pre-judgment," which is essential in both clinical and pedagogical contexts in the psychoanalytic field.


Asunto(s)
Psicoanálisis , Humanos , Psicoanálisis/educación , Enseñanza , Historia del Siglo XX
15.
Am J Psychoanal ; 84(3): 357-363, 2024 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39143198

RESUMEN

This introduction provides an overview to this special issue honoring the work and legacy of Jeremy D. Safran. Born of the Jeremy Safran Memorial Conference, held on April 2nd, 2023, this issue features a wide range of contributions from leaders in the field, former students, and early career professionals whose work engages and develops central ideas from Safran's work and reflects on his impact on their own clinical work and scholarship. Themes center around the three domains of Safran's major contributions: pedagogy; psychotherapy integration; and Buddhism, spirituality, and psychoanalysis. We observe among the contributions an experiential reconnecting with the deeply relational commitments of our friend and colleague.


Asunto(s)
Psicoanálisis , Humanos , Psicoanálisis/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Budismo
16.
Am J Psychoanal ; 84(3): 466-470, 2024 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39103518

RESUMEN

Jeremy Safran's pedagogical style was singular in its emphasis on experiential learning through role-plays, use of session video recordings, and his full-hearted embrace of therapists' subjectivity as a tool for therapeutic change. This paper is a personal reflection on the author's experiences as Jeremy Safran's student and how they have translated into her own teaching and supervision. She shares how teaching has been a means of reconnecting with her experiences learning from Jeremy, and the ways in which she tries to carry forward his unique contributions to the next generation of students and trainees.


Asunto(s)
Psicoanálisis , Enseñanza , Humanos , Psicoanálisis/historia , Psicoanálisis/educación , Historia del Siglo XX , Terapia Psicoanalítica/educación
17.
Am J Psychoanal ; 84(1): 57-78, 2024 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38424252

RESUMEN

Psychoanalysis had its origins in an era when feelings that could not be recognized by the mind were being manifested in the body. Psychoanalysis works towards resolving this type of split by recognizing the existence of a dual language structure that includes both body and mind as constituents of the fabric of embodied meanings. The field of psychosomatics helps to provide keys to this language, marking the essential, patterned truths that are recognized at very basic levels and increasingly organize our perceptions as we make sense of the world. In disrupting the integration of embodied meanings, trauma impedes identity development. For some patients, learning to make meaning from somatic symptoms is an important adjunct to coming to know their own embodied experience. Two cases will be offered in which somatic symptoms provided important information that was channeled through the analytic experience as a way of making sense of what otherwise remained unknown.


Asunto(s)
Síntomas sin Explicación Médica , Psicoanálisis , Humanos , Lenguaje , Emociones
18.
Am J Psychoanal ; 84(3): 402-413, 2024 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39143197

RESUMEN

Dr. Jeremy Safran had a unique talent to seamlessly weave together clinical work with his broad knowledge of philosophy, history, and theology. Alongside his commitment to researching the minutest clinical interactions, he was conscious of the broad values of the nature of the good life that underpinned his analytic approach. This paper will explore the concepts of the enchanted unconscious, clinical impasses, negotiation, and surrender, suggesting that these concepts together provide insight into Safran's larger philosophy of life. It will then provide the approach to these concepts of the Rebbes of Ishbitz/Radzin, a school of Polish Hasidic thought. It will conclude with an exploration of how both Safran's psychoanalytic approach and the Ishbitz/Radzin Rebbes' Hasidic approach to the Torah provide distinct insights and applications of these concepts, which can be mutually enriching for both disciplines.


Asunto(s)
Psicoanálisis , Humanos , Psicoanálisis/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Inconsciente en Psicología , Teoría Psicoanalítica , Terapia Psicoanalítica/métodos , Negociación
19.
Am J Psychoanal ; 84(3): 364-372, 2024 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39143199

RESUMEN

In this duet of two voices honoring Jeremy Safran's legacy, the authors celebrate some points of resonance between Sándor Ferenczi's groundbreaking relational interventions and Safran's approach to the therapeutic relationship as the heart of healing. Karen Starr first highlights Ferenczi's now well-known creative experimentation with technique and his emphasis on and care for the relational dimension of psychoanalytic treatment. Jill Bresler then links Safran's career-long dedication to the therapeutic alliance to Starr's introductory remarks, honoring Safran and Ferenczi's shared dedication to expanding options in clinical practice through focus on the relationship. Recalling Safran's naming Ferenczi as a key figure in psychotherapy integration's origin story, Bresler reflects on her own learning from Safran's groundbreaking transtheoretical research into the mutative aspects of psychotherapy and his translating a psychoanalytic focus on the therapeutic relationship to CBT researchers and practitioners.


Asunto(s)
Psicoanálisis , Terapia Psicoanalítica , Humanos , Psicoanálisis/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Terapia Psicoanalítica/métodos , Teoría Psicoanalítica , Alianza Terapéutica
20.
Am J Psychoanal ; 84(2): 311-333, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38755418

RESUMEN

This paper regards Seneca's practical philosophy as ancestor to psychoanalytically informed psychotherapy and as a progenitor of ongoing contemporary praxis in applied ideas of mind. Facing forward into the Anthropocene, as psychoanalysis encounters Artificial Intelligence, the convergence with contemporary psychoanalytic psychotherapy of value concepts developed from Antiquity is discussed. Drawn from Seneca's Letters on Ethics, constellations of significant ideas present in ancient practical philosophy resonate with similar configurations developed two millennia later, and central to the practice of contemporary psychotherapy.


Asunto(s)
Filosofía , Psicoanálisis , Humanos , Psicoanálisis/historia , Filosofía/historia , Terapia Psicoanalítica/métodos , Teoría Psicoanalítica , Inteligencia Artificial , Historia del Siglo XX
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