1st Edition

The Delusional Person Bodily Feelings in Psychosis

By Salomon Resnik Copyright 2001
    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    262 Pages
    by Routledge

    In a long and distinguished career Salomon Resnik has established himself as a psychoanalyst of international reputation. The present volume gathers together, for the first time in an English translation, writings essential for a fuller understanding of his important and original ideas.

    Foreword -- Introductory self-reflections -- Personalization -- Cotard's syndrome and depersonalization -- An attack of catatonic negativism -- Language and communication -- Body language and verbalization: the analysis of an acute psychotic crisis -- Countertransference -- The experience of space in the analytic situation -- A profile of the schizophrenic mind -- Postscriptum

    Biography

    Salomon Resnik, MD, became a member of the International Psychoanalytical Association in 1956, after specializing in work with autistic children and young schizophrenic patients. He then studied anthropology and philosophy in Paris with Merleau-Ponty, Levy-Strauss and Bastide. In 1958, he went to London to work with Melanie Klein and underwent analysis with Herbert Rosenfeld, supervised by W.R. Bion and Esther Bick, from whom he gained a new insight into child and adult analysis. In the same year, he began working with some of the pioneers of group analysis, including S.H. Foulkes, Malcolm Pines and Patrick De Mare. He has worked for many years with groups of psychotics in Argentina, England and Paris, and for ten years worked as a consultant psychiatrist in Verona at the Santa Giuliana Hospital. A former senior lecturer in psychiatry at the University of Lyon, France, and Visiting Professor at the medical school of the Catholic University of Rome, he was also a practising psychoanalyst in Paris and Venice.