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This volume will be of enormous interest and value to the growing number of people qualified both in the established and the new training societies for analysts and therapists, or studying to enter them. Within it theory and practice are closely interwoven, demonstrating how theories and models emerge, both from the study of earlier pioneering publications and from day to day experience, and are tested time and time again in the process of a group of practitioners accepting them as viable.An impressive and creative blend of the characteristics which this profession demands of its practitioners is in evidence here, combining originality with passion for their subject and the flexibility required to develop their own pattern of thought.'In the practice of modern analytical psychology it has become of central importance to reorganise, analyse and interpret projections and introjections of many sorts, the patient's transference, the analyst's counter-transference, and the dialectical interaction between the two, which is descriptively termed transference/counter-transference. Transference and counter-transference evoke each other; the patient's gradual acceptance of the analysis of those processes and his growing consciousness of the way they influence his relationships are facilitated by the analyst who can successfully blend his knowledge of archetypal forces, images and symbols with his experience of developmental factors.'- Judith Hubback, from the Introduction
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THE LIBRARY OF ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY VOLUME I1
TECHNIQUE IN JUNGIAN ANALYSIS Edited by
Michael Fordham, Rosemary Gordon Judith Hubback, Kenneth Lambert
Published for The Society of Analytical Psychology, London by KARNAC
LONDON
NEW YORK
First Published in 1974 Second edition 1989 published by H. Kamac (Books) Ltd. Karnac Books Ltd. 6 Pembroke Buildings 118 Finchley Road London NW 10 6RE London NW3 5HT Reprinted 2002 OThe Society of Analytical Psychology Ltd, 1974 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A C.I.P. for this book is available from the British Library 0 9464364964 946439 8 5 ISBN: 0978
Printed and bound by Antony Rowe Ltd, Easboume
Contents Page
Introduction to Second Edition Editorial introduction to First Edition
vii xi
PAR T I: TECHNIQUE The symbolic attitude in psychotherapy 3 The personality of the analyst in interpret18 ation and therapy L. ZINKIN: Flexibility in analytic technique 45 62 K. LAMBERT: Some notes on the process of reconstruction R. CAMPBELL: The management of the counter-transference evoked by violence in the delusional transference 85 100 M. FORDHAM: On terminating analysis
J. HUBBACK:
K. LAMBERT:
PAR T 11: TRANSFERENCE M. FORDHAM: Notes on the transference A. PLAUT: The transference in analytical psychology A. CANNON: Transference as creative illusion R. GORDON: Transference as the fulcrum of analysis D. DAVIDSON : Transference as a form of active imagination A. PLAUT: Transference phenomena in alcoholism PAR T ZII: COUNTER- TRA NSF'ERENCE w. KRAEMER: The dangers of unrecognized countertransference M. FORDHAM: Counter-transference R. STRAUSS : Counter-transference M. FORDHAM: Technique and counter-transference A. PLAUT: Comment: on not incarnating the archetype M. FORDHAM: A reply to Plaut's 'Comment' K. LAMBERT : Transference/counter-transference: talion law and gratitude Index
III
152
161 178 I 88 200
219 240
251 260
289 297 303
329
An asterisk at the end of a refere