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Controversies in analytical psychology

By: Material type: TextTextHove, East Sussex/New York Brunner-Routledge c2003Description: xiv, 374p.; ill.; bibliog. refs; indexContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0415233054
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • BF173 .C569 2003
Contents:
Introduction - Robert Withers. Controversy One - Prospects for the Jung/Klein synthesis. (a) With healing in her wings: integration and repair in a self-destructive adolescent - Elizabeth Urban. (b) Classical Jungian comment Julian David. (c) Kleinian comment - Robert Hinshelwood. (d) Response to commentaries by Julian David and Robert Hinshelwood - Elizabeth Urban. Controversy Two - The status of developmental theory. (a) Uneasy ghosts: theories of the child and the crisis in psychoanalysis - Christopher Hauke. (b) Jung, Jungians and the idea of birth trauma - Joann Culbert-Koehn. Controversy Three - Transference, countertransference and beyond. (a) Transcending the transference - Verena Kast. (b) Working in the transference - Barry Proner. (c) Response to Barry Proner - Verena Kast. Controversy Four - The political in analysis. Introduction - Christopher Hauke. (a) Working directly with political, social and cultural material in the therapy session - Andrew Samuels. (b) Politics in practice - Robert Withers. (c) Response - Andrew Samuels. Controversy Five - Analysis and implicit homophobia. (a) Analytical psychology and homosexual orientation - Chess Denman. (b) A comment on Denman - Richard Carvalho. (c) Response to Carvalho - Chess Denman. (d) Reply to Denman's response - Richard Carvalho. Controversy Six - Approaching religion. (a) Analytical psychology, religion and the academy - Roderick Main. (b) Religion and the terrified - Melanie Withers. Controversy Seven - The body, analysis and homeopathy. (a) Alchemy, homeopathy and the treatment of borderline cases - Edward Whitmont. (b) The demonization of the body in analysis - Robert Withers. Controversy Eight - The contemporary status of archetypal theory. (a) Archetypal theory: the evolutionary dimension - Anthony Stevens. (b) Psyche, language and biology: the argument for a co-evolutionary approach - Paul Kugler. Controversy Nine - Reflections on the anima and culture. (a) The psychological feminine and contrasexuality in analytical psychology - Joy Schaverien. (b) Jung and the feminine - Ann Shearer. Controversy Ten - Frequency of sessions and the analytic frame. Frequency of sessions and the analytic frame - Moira Duckworth and Martin Stone. Controversy Eleven - The role of interpreting and relating in analytic therapy. (a) Does psychoanalysis heal? A contribution to the theory of psychoanalytic technique. (b) Interpretation and relationship: ends or means? A commentary on Caper - Warren Colman. (c) Response to Colman - Robert Caper. (d) Reply to Caper - Warren Colman
Abstract: 'Analytical psychology is a broad church, and influences areas such as literature, cultural studies and religion. However...there are many different schools of thought and practice which hae resulted in divisions within the field. [The book] picks up on these and explores many of the most hotly contested issues in and around analytical psychology. A group of leading international, mainly Jungian authors have contributed papers from contrasting perspectives on a series of key controversies....'
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Includes bibliographical references and index..

Introduction - Robert Withers. Controversy One - Prospects for the Jung/Klein synthesis. (a) With healing in her wings: integration and repair in a self-destructive adolescent - Elizabeth Urban. (b) Classical Jungian comment Julian David. (c) Kleinian comment - Robert Hinshelwood. (d) Response to commentaries by Julian David and Robert Hinshelwood - Elizabeth Urban. Controversy Two - The status of developmental theory. (a) Uneasy ghosts: theories of the child and the crisis in psychoanalysis - Christopher Hauke. (b) Jung, Jungians and the idea of birth trauma - Joann Culbert-Koehn. Controversy Three - Transference, countertransference and beyond. (a) Transcending the transference - Verena Kast. (b) Working in the transference - Barry Proner. (c) Response to Barry Proner - Verena Kast. Controversy Four - The political in analysis. Introduction - Christopher Hauke. (a) Working directly with political, social and cultural material in the therapy session - Andrew Samuels. (b) Politics in practice - Robert Withers. (c) Response - Andrew Samuels. Controversy Five - Analysis and implicit homophobia. (a) Analytical psychology and homosexual orientation - Chess Denman. (b) A comment on Denman - Richard Carvalho. (c) Response to Carvalho - Chess Denman. (d) Reply to Denman's response - Richard Carvalho. Controversy Six - Approaching religion. (a) Analytical psychology, religion and the academy - Roderick Main. (b) Religion and the terrified - Melanie Withers. Controversy Seven - The body, analysis and homeopathy. (a) Alchemy, homeopathy and the treatment of borderline cases - Edward Whitmont. (b) The demonization of the body in analysis - Robert Withers. Controversy Eight - The contemporary status of archetypal theory. (a) Archetypal theory: the evolutionary dimension - Anthony Stevens. (b) Psyche, language and biology: the argument for a co-evolutionary approach - Paul Kugler. Controversy Nine - Reflections on the anima and culture. (a) The psychological feminine and contrasexuality in analytical psychology - Joy Schaverien. (b) Jung and the feminine - Ann Shearer. Controversy Ten - Frequency of sessions and the analytic frame. Frequency of sessions and the analytic frame - Moira Duckworth and Martin Stone. Controversy Eleven - The role of interpreting and relating in analytic therapy. (a) Does psychoanalysis heal? A contribution to the theory of psychoanalytic technique. (b) Interpretation and relationship: ends or means? A commentary on Caper - Warren Colman. (c) Response to Colman - Robert Caper. (d) Reply to Caper - Warren Colman

'Analytical psychology is a broad church, and influences areas such as literature, cultural studies and religion. However...there are many different schools of thought and practice which hae resulted in divisions within the field. [The book] picks up on these and explores many of the most hotly contested issues in and around analytical psychology. A group of leading international, mainly Jungian authors have contributed papers from contrasting perspectives on a series of key controversies....'

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