Ego psychology : theory and practice

書誌事項

Ego psychology : theory and practice

Gertrude and Rubin Blanck

Columbia University Press, c1994

2nd ed

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注記

Bibliography: p. [309]-318

Includes indexes

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This best seller breaks new ground by demonstrating how mainstream psychoanalytic theory has evolved into a psychoanalytic developmental object relations theory. The authors summarize the contributions of the major ego psychologists from Freud to the contemporary theorists, including the new findings of the child observationalists. By integrating these several contributions, the authors are able to show that classical psychoanalysis and ego psychology combine to form a unified theory that provides a more profound understanding of the borderline and narcissistic conditions as well as of the neuroses. From this comprehensive synthesis of theory the authors derive techniques for the treatment of the more troubled patient and expand the classical technique for the psychoanalysis of neurosis. Recognizing that there are preoedipal developmental problems even in neurotic patients and that there are oedipal issues in the borderline and narcissistic patients, the authors demonstrate the applicability of developmental object realtions theory across the diagnostic spectrum and include a new chapter on termination. Using numerous case illustrations from their own practice, the Blancks have constructed an extraordinarily comprehensive and readable text that updates psychoanalytic theory for the nineties.

目次

1. Theory 1. Historical Roots of Ego Psychology 2. Conflict Theory, Drive theory, and Ego Psychological Object Relations Theory 3. The Contributions of Heinz Hartmann 4. The Contributions of Hartmann with His Collaborators 5. The Contributions of Ernst Kris 6. The Contributions of Edith Jacobson 7. The Contributions of Rene A. Spitz 8.The Contributions of Margaret S. Mahler 9. The Contributions of Otto F. Kernberg 10. The Contributions of Heinz Kohut 11. Object Relations theory and Structure Formation 12. Human Sexuality: An Object Relations Perspective 2. Technique 13. Descriptive Developmental Diagnosis and the Fulcrum of Development 14. Differences Between Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy 15. On Beginning the Treatment 16. On Beginning the Treatment: Practical Considerations 17. Transference: Interpretable and Uninterpretable 18. Resistance: The unmotivated Patient 19. Reconstruction of Preverbal Experience 20. The Use of Dreams in Psychotherapy 21. Interpretation 22. Depression 23. Specific Techniques of Psychotherpay 24. On Ending the Treatment

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