1st Edition

Subject Relations Unconscious Experience and Relational Psychoanalysis

By Naomi G . Rucker, Karen L. Lombardi Copyright 1998
    202 Pages
    by Routledge

    202 Pages
    by Routledge

    Traditional psychoanalysis views relationships as forged through individual drives--a satisfaction and fulfillment of needs and desires. Rucker and Lombardi contend, however, that all relationships cannot be explained so simply; rather, they argue that human relationships carry meanings which cannot be reduced solely to the psychic contributions of each of the individuals involved. Instead, Subject Relations discusses the existence of a related unconscious rooted in mutual subjective experience.
    The authors cite numerous clinical examples that show how the unconscious material generated by human interrelatedness comes to light. Drawing on the work of Matte-Blanco as well as traditional object relations theorists such as Melanie Klein, D.W. Winnicott, and Thomas Ogden, the authors examine how identifications that exist through unconscious processes manifest themselves in psychoanalytic theory and practice.

    1: Resurrecting the Unconscious in Contemporary Psychoanalysis; 2: Dialogues of the Unconscious; 3: Sounds of Silence; 4: The Unconscious Catch in Psychoanalytic Supervision; 5: The Mutual Creation of Temporal Experience; 6: The Prenatal Anlage of Psychic Life; 7: Subject Relations as Seen through Prenatal Observation; 8: Mother as Object, Mother as Subject; 9: Intimate Subjects; 10: Words to the Wise on the Wisdom in Subject Relations; 11: The Political and the Personal

    Biography

    Naomi G. Rucker is on the Faculty at the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis. Karen L. Lombardi is Associate Professor at the Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, Adelphi University.

    "Lombardi and Rucker provide us with a truly original interpretation of the Freudian unconscious from within their own interpretation of relational theory. The authors bring together the insight gained from years of clinical practice with an impressive knowledge of the theoretical debates amongst the various schools of psychoanalysis. Lucidly written and carefully argued,Subject Relations will undoubtedly make a significant contribution to psychoanalytic theory." -- Drucilla Cornell