1st Edition

The Place of the Visual in Psychoanalytic Practice Image in the Countertransference

By Faye Carey Copyright 2018
    142 Pages
    by Routledge

    142 Pages
    by Routledge

    The Place of the Visual in Psychoanalytic Practice: Image in the Countertransference explores the place of the visual image in psychoanalysis and psychotherapy, a still relatively unexplored topic in the psychoanalytic literature. Though ‘talking therapies’ are necessarily structured around the use of the spoken word, it can be difficult and at times misleading to explore the unconscious through speech alone.

    This book examines how it may be further understood through recognising the presence of imagery as a form of non-verbal, but valuable, means of communication. Drawing on the work of Freud, Bion, Winnicott and Ogden, alongside other British and American contributions to this infrequently addressed subject, the book examines the connection between reverie, dream and daydream and explores the reservoirs of imagery of both client and therapist, focusing mainly on the therapists' s visual countertransference.

    Covering essential theory and a wealth of clinical material, The Place of the Visual in Psychoanalytic Practice: Image in the Countertransference is a rich yet accessible guide to both recognising and using visual imagery within the clinical setting for both psychoanalysts and psychotherapists.

    CONTENTS

    Acknowledgements

    INTRODUCTION

    1. WHAT IS A MENTAL IMAGE?

    2. SPATIALITY, DIMENSIONALITY AND THE VISUAL

    3. UNCONSCIOUS COMMUNICATION:

    Projection, Projective Identification Reverie and Countertransference

    4. CONSIDERATIONS OF REPRESENTABILITY

    5. DYNAMICS OF IMAGERY

    6. VISUAL REVERIE: THE THERAPIST’S DAYDREAM

    7. CONCLUSION

    References

    Biography

    Faye Carey is a psychoanalytic psychotherapist in private practice in London, UK, and Chair of Training for the London Centre for Psychotherapy.

    "Faye Carey has written a book that is engaging, challenging, even inspiring. Her book is scholarly, as she traces the development of ideas about the use of imagery by both patient and analyst in the psychoanalytic literature, and also passionate, as she regards the devaluation of the visual within psychoanalytic theory and practice in favour of the verbal as having deprived analytic practitioners of a rich and potentially liberating source of material for making better sense of their patients’ internal world."

    Laurence Spurling, Senior Lecturer in Psychosocial Studies, School of Social Science, History and Philosophy, Birkbeck College, University of London

     

    "A bird, a spider, a laundrette, a busy junction: this fascinating, lucid book explores the occurrence of ‘oblique’, fugitive visual images in the analyst’s mind. With an impressive depth of theoretical understanding, Faye Carey systematically guides the reader through ideas about internal space, reverie and projective processes, representation and representability, images in relation to words, and the dynamic, collaborative nature of image construction: the unbidden image can be a crucible for unconscious processing. Drawing mainly on British and American sources, and enlivening her text with case material and with her own sketches, Carey has produced a work of satisfying richness."

    Robert Snell, Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist, British Psychotherapy Foundation