1st Edition

Commentaries Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 16.4

Edited By Melvin Bornstein Copyright 1996
    132 Pages
    by Routledge

    132 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1996. This is Volume 12, number 4 of Psychoanalytic Inquiry 1996. Lawrence Friedman has given psychoanalysts a fresh slant on the analytic situation. He has written of the experience of the analyst, which, until recently, was uncommon in analytic literature. He has asked how analysts think in the analytic situation. This issue of Psychoanalytic Inquiry recognizes that ‘The Anatomy of Psychotherapy’ is a significant book and this is a collection of articles with commentaries by a variety of analytic writers, followed by Lawrence Friedman's response, that seeks to illuminate the important issues taken up in the book.

    Prologue, Melvin Bornstein, M. D., Issue Editor
    - The Anatomy of Psychotherapy by Lawrence Friedman: A Commentary, Fred G. Hilkert, M.D.
    - Commentary on The Anatomy of Psychotherapy, Theodore J. Jacobs, M.D.
    -
    Friedman's Paradox, Melvin Bornstein,M.D.
    - Discussion on The Anatomy of Psychotherapy, Robert Michels M. D.
    - Action, Transference, and Resistance: Some Reflections on a Paradox at the Heart of Analytic Technique, Howard B. Levine, M. D.
    - The Relation of Theory to Therapy: An Alternative Vision, Robert S. Wallerstein, M.D.
    - Psychotherapy Versus Psychoanalysis: A Theory-Dependent Distinction?, Estelle Shane, Ph.D. and Morton Shane, M.D.
    - A Response, Lawrence Friedman, M.D.
    Epilogue, Melvin Bornstein, M.D., Issue Editor

    Biography

    Melvin Bornstein