1st Edition

Theory and Practice in Child Psychoanalysis An Introduction to the Work of Francoise Dolto

Edited By Guy Hall, Francoise Hivernel, Sian Morgan Copyright 2009
    250 Pages
    by Routledge

    250 Pages
    by Routledge

    During her lifetime Francoise Dolto revolutionized the psychoanalytic understanding of childhood. As an early pioneer, she emphasized that the child is to be recognized from birth as a person. As a gifted and innovative clinician, Dolto developed her ideas about the unconscious image of the body. An image that is unique to each individual and linked to both a person's history and narcissism, rather then their physicality. It is the symbolic incarnation of a person's desires. Dolto began her career as a member of the IPA, was admired by Winnicott, close to Lacan and influenced by Morgenstern. Her life witnessed an extraordinary evolution from the conservatism of her parents, through the second World War, to the turbulence of Paris in the 1950s and 60s. In the succeeding years, Dolto made a number of original contributions to the understanding of psychosis, neonatology, female sexuality, education, and religion. Although controversial, she was able to write both for the general public and for professional colleagues.

    Preface -- Introduction -- Françoise Dolto: a biography -- Françoise Dolto’s contribution to neonatology -- Childhood psychosis -- Seeing the bigger picture -- The unconscious image of the body -- Gendering the libido: Françoise Dolto and female sexuality -- Homosexuality in women -- La Maison Verte: a place for words. Personal reflections on working with Françoise Dolto -- La Casa Verde: speech, listening, welcoming in Françoise Dolto’s work -- Desire, Dire, Dieu, and Dolto -- Chronology of the life of Françoise Dolto

    Biography

    Guy Hall, Francoise Hivernel, Sian Morgan