Description
About the Author
Andrew C. Furman, Steven T. Levy
Reviews
The 1950s were a pivotal era in psychoanalysis. It was a time when psychoanalytic attention turned from the exploration of the internal world to the external. The influence of object relational ideas grew on various issues and Kleinian ideas gained a stronger foothold in North America. There were numerous contributions on the subject of countertransference from varying psychoanalytic schools of thought. Early preoedipal experiences between child and mother moved to the forefront of analytic theory, coupled with a growing recognition of the critical importance of this relationship on subsequent development. There was a burgeoning interest in serious personality disturbances.The papers featured in this indispensable volume exemplify the leading themes of the time and have had a lasting impact on psychoanalytic theory and practice. They have been proven to be as relevant in contemporary life as they were in the 1950s.Contributors: Michael Balint, W.R. Bion, John Bowlby, Paula Heimann, Jacques Lacan, Margaret Little, Rudolf Loewenstein, Margaret Mahler, Roger Money-Kryle, Heinrich Racker, Annie Reich, Hanna Segal, D.W. Winnicott, Elizabeth Zetzel
Book Information
ISBN 9781855759299
Author Andrew C. Furman
Format Paperback
Page Count 320
Imprint Karnac Books
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd