03915oam 2200685I 450 991078647340332120230814232223.00-429-91911-50-429-90488-60-429-48011-31-283-80621-51-78241-041-4(CKB)2670000000279141(EBL)1068559(OCoLC)818846314(SSID)ssj0000760963(PQKBManifestationID)11408062(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000760963(PQKBWorkID)10723312(PQKB)10010842(MiAaPQ)EBC1068559(Au-PeEL)EBL1068559(CaPaEBR)ebr10628075(CaONFJC)MIL411871(OCoLC)823729360(OCoLC)28222825(FINmELB)ELB148206(EXLCZ)99267000000027914120180727h20181999 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrShared experience the psychoanalytic dialogue /by Luciana Nissim MomiglianoFirst edition.Boca Raton, FL :Routledge, an imprint of Taylor and Francis,[2018].©1999.1 online resource (273 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-367-32687-6 1-85575-034-1 Includes bibliographical references and index.COVER; ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS; CONTENTS; CONTRIBUTORS; FOREWORD; INTRODUCTION: Meeting at a cross-roads; PART ONE: The analytic relationship; INTRODUCTION; 1. Two people talking In a room:an Investigation on the analytic dialogue; 2. Meeting, telling, and parting:three basic factors In the psychoanalytic experience; 3. From a play between ""parts"" to transformations In the couple:psychoanalysis In a bipersonal field; PART TWO: The analyst's mind; INTRODUCTION; 4. The tale of the Green Hand:on projective Identification; 5. Surviving. existing, living:reflections on the analyst's anxietyPART THREE: The clinical fieldINTRODUCTION; 6. Premature termination of analysis; 7. Negative therapeutic reactionsand microfractures In analytic communication; 8. On transference psychosis:clinical perspectivesin work with borderline patients; 9. Cassandra:a myth for hypochondria; REFERENCES; INDEXThis book presents a way to formulate, from several points of view, "Psychoanalysis as an encounter between two persons", and highlights the aspects of symmetry and affective exchange of this encounter where analysis is seen as a relationship between two minds. In this shared experience the study of the mind of the Analyst and of his method of work grows in importance as the source of benefits and misdirections which can be exchanged in the encounter with the patient. In this context, the patient has an active role as an attentive and sensitive observer of the Analyst, signaling errors and showing the road to be taken. This change in the concept of psychoanalysis has evolved through many years; from the Analyst acting to open the patient within himself, while at the same time struggling against his own resistance to change, to a vision of a "Couple at Work". Psychoanalysis is now a "shared experience", in which the listening and creating of internal space to the other, within the self, is the instrument and the journey.PsychoanalysisItalyPsychoanalystsItalyBiographyPsychologyItalyBiographical methodsPsychoanalysisPsychoanalystsPsychologyBiographical methods.150.195Nissim Momigliano Luciana266249FlBoTFGFlBoTFGBOOK9910786473403321Shared experience3785458UNINA