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Bibliography (with links to Google Books previews) https://www.confer.uk.com/module-study-guide/relational/paper-bibliography-3.html Fri, 10 May 2019 18:42:31 +0000 http://www.confereducation.com/wp/?post_type=module_study_guide&p=4318 Confer

Relational Perspectives Book Series by Routledge (New York & London) Aron L (1991) The patient's experience of the analyst's subjectivity. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 1(1): 29-51. Aron L (1996) A meeting of Minds: Mutuality in Psychoanalysis. Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press. Aron L (2003a) Clinical outbursts and theoretical breakthroughs: A unifying theme in the work of Stephen A. Mitchell. Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 13, [...]

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Relational Perspectives Book Series by Routledge (New York & London)

Aron L (1991) The patient’s experience of the analyst’s subjectivity. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 1(1): 29-51.

Aron L (1996) A meeting of Minds: Mutuality in Psychoanalysis. Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press.

Aron L (2003a) Clinical outbursts and theoretical breakthroughs: A unifying theme in the work of Stephen A. Mitchell. Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 13, 273-287.

Aron L (2003b) The paradoxical place of enactment in psychoanalysis: Introduction. Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 13, 623-631.

Aron L and Starr K (2013) A Psychotherapy for the People: Toward a Progressive Psychoanalysis: 55 (Relational Perspectives Book Series). New York, NY: Routledge.

Atwood G (2012) The Abyss of Madness. New York, NY: Routledge.

Atwood G and Stolorow R (1979) Faces in a Cloud. Northvale, NJ: Aronson, 2001.

Atwood G and Stolorow R (1984) Structures of Subjectivity. Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press, 1993, 1st Ed.

Atwood G and Stolorow R (2014) Structures of Subjectivity. New York, NY: Routledge, 2nd Ed.

Beebe B (2005) Forms of Intersubjectivity in Infant Research and Adult Treatment. New York, NY: Other Press.

Beebe B (2012) Mothers, Infants and Young Children of September 11, 2001. London, England: Routledge.

Beebe B and Lachmann F (2005) Infant Research and Adult Treatment. Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press.

Beebe B and Lachmann F (2014) The Origins of Attachment. New York, NY: Taylor & Francis Group.

Benjamin J (1988) The Bonds of Love: Psychoanalysis, Feminism, and the Problem of Domination. New York, NY: Pantheon Books.

Benjamin J (1990) An outline of intersubjectivity: The development of recognition. Psychoanalytic Psychology 7(Suppl):33-46.

Benjamin J (2002) The rhythm of recognition: Comments on the work of Louis Sander. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 12:43-53

Benjamin J (2004) Beyond Doer and Done to: An Intersubjective View of Thirdness. The Psychoanalytic Quarterly, LXXIII(1):5-46.

Benjamin J (2009) A relational psychoanalysis perspective on the necessity of acknowledging failure in order to restore the facilitating and containing features of the intersubjective relationship (the shared third). The International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 90(3):441-450.

Bowlby J (1969) Attachment and Loss Vol. 1. London, UK: Random House.

Bowlby (1973) Attachment and Loss Vol. 2: Anger and Anxiety. London, UK: Random House

Bowlby (1980) Attachment and Loss Vol. 3: Sadness and Depression. London, UK: Random House

Brandchaft B, Doctors S and Sorter D (2010) Toward an Emancipatory Psychoanalysis: Brandchaft’s Intersubjective Vision: 31 (Psychoanalytic Inquiry Book Series). New York, NY: Routledge.

Bromberg PM (1979) Interpersonal psychoanalysis and regression. Contemporary Psychoanalysis 15: 647-655.

Bromberg PM (1980) Sullivan’s concept of consensual validation and the therapeutic action of psychoanalysis. Contemporary Psychoanalysis 16: 237-248.

Bromberg PM (1991) Introduction. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 1: 8-12.

Bromberg PM (1993) Shadow and substance: A relational perspective on clinical process. Psychoanalytic Psychology 10: 147-168.

Bromberg P (1996) Standing in the spaces. Contemporary Psychoanalysis 32(4): 509-535.

Bromberg PM (2006) Awakening the Dreamer. New York, NY: Routledge.

Bromberg PM (2011) In the Shadow of the Tsunami. New York, NY: Routledge.

Brothers D (2008) Toward a Psychology of Uncertainty. New York, NY: Analytic Press.

Buirski P and Haglund P (2001) Making Sense Together: The Intersubjective Approach to Psychotherapy. Northvale, NJ: Aronson.

Chodorow N The Reproduction of Mothering: Psychoanalysis and the Sociology of Gender (1978);[2][3] Feminism and Psychoanalytic Theory (1989); Femininities, Masculinities, Sexualities: Freud and Beyond(1994); and The Power of Feelings: Personal Meaning in Psychoanalysis, Gender, and Culture (1999).

Coles P (2011) The Uninvited Guest from the Unremembered Past. London, England: Karnac Books.

Evans F (2006) Harry Stack Sullivan: Interpersonal Theory and Psychotherapy. London, England: Routledge.

Fonagy P, Gergely G, Jurist E and Target M (2002) Affect Regulation, Mentalization, and the Development of the Self. New York, NY: Other Press.

Fonagy P and Target M (2003) Psychoanalytic Theories: Perspectives from Developmental Psychopathology. London, UK: Whurr Publishing.

Frie R and Orange D (2009) Beyond Postmodernism. London, England: Routledge.

Gadamer HG (1975) Truth and Method. London, England: Bloomsbury Academic.

Greenberg JA and Mitchell SA (1983) Object Relations in Psychoanalytic Theory. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Hoffman IZ (1991) Discussion: Toward a social?constructivist view of the psychoanalytic situation. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 1(1): 74-105.

Jaffe J, Beebe B, Feldstein S, Crown CL and Jasnow MD (2001) Rhythms of Dialogue in Infancy. Boston, MA: Blackwell Publishers.

Jaenicke C (2015) The Search for a Relational Home. London, England: Routledge.

Kohut H (1971) The Analysis of the Self. New York, NY: International Universities Press.

Kohut H (1977) The Restoration of the Self. New York, NY: International Universities Press.

Kohut H (1984) How Does Analysis Cure? Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.

Lachmann F (2008) Transforming Narcissism: Reflections on Empathy, Humor, and Expectations: 28 (Psychoanalytic Inquiry Book Series). New York: Analytic Press.

Loewenthal D and Samuels A (2014) Relational Psychotherapy, Psychoanalysis and Counselling. Hove, UK: Routledge.

Lichtenberg J, Lachmann, F and Fosshage J (1996) The Clinical Exchange: Techniques Derived from Self and Motivational Systems (Psychoanalytic Inquiry Book Series). Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press, 2001.

Lichtenberg J, Lachmann F and Fosshage J (2002) A Spirit of Inquiry: Communication in Psychoanalysis: 20 (Psychoanalytic Inquiry Book Series). Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press, 2001.

Lichtenberg J, Lachmann F and Fosshage J (2011) Psychoanalysis and Motivational Systems: A New Look: 34 (Psychoanalytic Inquiry Book Series). New York: Routledge.

Mahler M (1975) The Psychological Birth of the Human Infant. New York, NY: Basic Books, 2008.

Mills J (2005) Relational and Intersubjective Perspectives in Psychoanalysis. Northvale, NJ: Aronson.

Mills J (2012) Conundrums: A Critique of Contemporary Psychoanalysis. New York, NY: Routledge.

Mitchell SA (1988) Relational Concepts in Psychoanalysis. Boston, MA: Harvard University Press.

Orbach S (2014) Democratising psychoanalysis. In: Loewenthal D and Samuels A (eds) Relational Psychotherapy, Psychoanalysis and Counselling. Hove, UK: Routledge.

Orange D (1995) Emotional Understanding: Studies in Psychoanalytic Epistemology. New York, NY: Guilford Press.

Orange D (2010) Thinking for Clinicians. New York, NY: Routledge.

Orange D (2011) The Suffering Stranger: Hermeneutics for Everyday Clinical Practice. New York, NY: Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group.

Orange D, Atwood G and Stolorow R (1997) Working Intersubjectively. New York, NY: Routledge.

Samuels A (2010) The transcendent function and politics: NO!. Journal of Analytical Psychology 55: 241-253.

Samuels A (2014) Political and clinical developments in analytical psychology, 1972-2014: subjectivity, equality and diversity-inside and outside the consulting room. Journal of Analytical Psychology 59(5): 641-660.

Shaw D (2014) Traumatic Narcissism: Relational Systems of Subjugation (Relational Perspectives Book Series). New York, NY: Taylor & Francis Group.

Stern DB (1997) Unformulated Experience: From Dissociation to Imagination in Psychoanalysis. Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press.

Stern DB (2010) Partners in Thought. New York, NY: Routledge.

Stern DN (1985) The Interpersonal World of the Infant. London: Karnac Books, 1995.

Stern DN (2004) The Present Moment in Psychotherapy and Everyday Life. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.

Stolorow R (2007) Trauma and Human Existence. New York, NY: Analytic Press.

Stolorow R (2011) World, Affectivity, Trauma. New York, NY: Routledge.

Stolorow R, Brandchaft B and Atwood G (1995) Psychoanalytic Treatment. London: Routledge, 2013.

Stolorow R and Atwood G (1992) Contexts of Being. Hillsdale, NJ: The Analytic Press, 2002.

Stolorow R, Atwood G and Branchaft B (1994) The Intersubjective Perspective. Northvale, NJ: J. Aronson.

Stolorow R, Atwood G and Orange D (2002) Worlds of Experience. New York, NY: Basic Books.

Sullivan HS (1940) Conceptions of Modern Psychiatry. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company, 1966.

Sullivan HS (1953) The Interpersonal Theory of Psychiatry. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company, 1968.

Sullivan HS (1962) Schizophrenia as Human Process. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company, 1974.

Sullivan HS (1964) Fusion of Psychiatry and Social Science. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company, 1971.

Sullivan HS (1965)Personal Psychopathology: Early Formulations. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company, 1984.

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Glossary of Relational Concepts https://www.confer.uk.com/module-study-guide/relational/paper-glossary.html Fri, 10 May 2019 18:41:14 +0000 http://www.confereducation.com/wp/?post_type=module_study_guide&p=4317 Confer

Dissociation: Bromberg (1996) sees dissociation as a defence that is used to allow an escape from experiences that are linked to a threat of the infant, initially, and the adult, eventually, being overwhelmed with affect without the possibility of becoming able to symbolise the experience. The use of dissociation in early development leads to the formation [...]

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Dissociation: Bromberg (1996) sees dissociation as a defence that is used to allow an escape from experiences that are linked to a threat of the infant, initially, and the adult, eventually, being overwhelmed with affect without the possibility of becoming able to symbolise the experience. The use of dissociation in early development leads to the formation of separate self-states that are kept isolated, with a resultant impoverishment of the self as a whole. In his most recent book (Bromberg, 2011) he describes the experience of living with trauma as living in the “shadow of the tsunami”. He conceptualises therapeutic action as the outcome of an ongoing encounter between the subjectivities of analyst and patient that involves “shrinking the “tsunami” little by little. One aspect of therapeutic action involves the patient’s capacity to symbolise previously non-verbal material that has become dissociated (Bromberg 2006).

Enactment: Or the interpersonalisation of dissociation according (Stern 2010: 14). Both Bromberg and Stern argue that what is dissociated is not particular mental content, but specific aspects of identity. If the analysand cannot and will not inhabit the dissociated “self-states” (see below) that may be at risk of being formulated during a relational interaction, then the analyst will be pressed to experience these self-states instead. Many relational analysts (e.g. Benjamin 2009) consider that hurting the analysand is an inevitable part of the work, i.e. enactments of some sort are unavoidable. Benjamin considers that “moments of excess that fail to evoke a mirroring knowledge can serve instead to signal the unformulated, undifferentiated malaise, despair or fear” (Benjamin 2009: 441). In other words enactment is the only way to access dissociated parts of the self. However, the analyst’s capacity to forgive himself or herself is an important part of the work too.

Mutual Recognition: Mutual recognition (Benjamin 1990) refers to the perception and acknowledgement of another person as a subject who has a similar and yet separate mind. Benjamin’s concern throughout her writing career is the move away from what she sees as the limitations of subject-object relationships to subject-subject relationships. She sees this as not simply a lack of linguistic lack of precision, but an implicit position that affects the conceptualisation of analytic work.

Objectification: Part of enactment is a process of “objectification” (Bromberg 2006: 34). The patient objectifies an aspect of the self as being an aspect of the object, here the analyst. The analyst likewise may objectify the patient as the site of where the enactment is coming from, because of his or her own dissociation. This view is also prominent in the work of Jessica Bejamin. This situation represents a lack of intersubjectivity that needs to be restored. At some point, Bromberg believes, the analyst stops seeing the patient as simply repeating something from the past and acknowledges the situation as occurring in the here and now between the two participants. Both parties can then begin to compare their perceived realities through a process of dialogue.

Self-States: One of Bromberg’s oft cited concepts related to unconsciousness. (Bromberg 19962006: 31). Bromberg sees selfhood as a “shifting configuration of mental states” (Bromberg, 2006: 32). In an optimal situation there is a fluid shifting between these different self-states while the individual is able to retain self-cohesion and self-validation in the face of novel experiences. Developmentally, this process is made possible through the attainment of affect regulation in early parent-infant relationships. However, in certain psychopathologies, different self-states are isolated from each other so that at any one time one self-state colonises consciousness.

Surrender: Drawing on a number of Winnicottian concepts, Ghent attempts to clarify the meaning of surrender as a concept distinct from masochism and submission. It refers to the self’s surrender to the ego as the antidote to the false self’s resistance and commitment to the status quo. Submission is an agent of resistance and at best an adaptation of perceived necessity. Ghent speculates on the existence of a wish to for the true self to experience a rebirth, to “come clean” of all the defences in the service of this notion to surrender. This wish that is essentially one of being recognised by the Other. Ghent enumerates some of the characteristics of surrender highlighting its difference from submission. Acceptance is an outcome of surrender, resignation an outcome of submission. Ghent often references the difference between West and East, defeat and yielding, information and transformation, with a clear position against the limitations of the west. He references Marion Milner’s work on art, and other sources as he attempts to articulate the phenomenology of surrendering, attempting to hypothesise the developmental origins of this phenomenon. He does not see it as an inherent drive towards self-integration, but as a need towards restitution where development has become stunted. It appears as something complex that can sometimes be confused with depression, withdrawal or even psychosis. The wish to surrender occupies a boundary between wish and fear, as it involves facing the dread that originally resulted in the formation of the false self. This “controlled dissolution of self-boundaries is at times sought, not only feared” (p. 116). He likens it to Winnicott’s fear of breakdown, the dread of experiencing a breakdown that has already occurred, but also the wish to remember it.

Third: A concept proposed by Jessica Benjamin. She argues against the classical view that one participant as a subject that “does” something to the other, who is then left feeling as an object that has been “done to” (Benjamin 2004). The difference between a subject-subject and the above subject-object relationship is the difference between reciprocity (two-way directionality) and complementarity (one-way directionality). A subject-subject relationship in Benjamin’s view (2004) requires the position of a “third”: This is not an object (such as the analyst’s theory), but a sort of mental space that Benjamin likens to Winnicott’s potential space. “Surrendering” (Ghent 1990) to the third implies achieving a state of freedom involving accepting connectedness and difference rather than occupying a position of control and coercion.

Unformulated Experience: Stern (1997) speaks of “unformulated experience” to designate that which is dissociated and therefore unconscious. Like Bromberg he makes use of Sullivan’s me, bad-me, and not-me distinctions to explain the outcomes of dissociation. Stern (2010) adopts a post-modernist view that assumes there is no pre-existing meaning waiting to be revealed or discovered, but rather potentially able to be formulated within a relational context. Stern is at pains to emphasise that this position does not constitute relativism, where any meaning is possible, but rather that the possible meanings that can be formulated are delimited by pre-existing experience. He references the “relational or interpersonal field” that is created between analyst and analysand, without each participant’s awareness, and which shapes what they experience together. This relational field affects what they also experience in their own minds in the presence of each other, and often outside this presence. Stern also emphasises the continuity of clinical process by highlighting that the experience that is constructed between the two analytic participants influences the experience that follows. It would appear that Stern takes up a critical realist position describing his theory as mid-way between objectivism and relativism. What delimits the formulation of unformulated experience in the analytic encounter is a structure encompassing culture, history, and tradition that places constraints in how “reality” (although existing) is apprehended. These constraints can be “tight” or loose”. Unformulated experience is not located in a compartment of the mind’s topography as envisioned by Freud, but in relatedness. Each participant is creating experience and constituted by it so that, as mentioned before, transference and countertransference are seen as arising from a selection of available possibilities. They are not simply distortions of each participant’s experience, but they are based on rigidity rather than flexibility. They do not easily change with experience and can prevent the experiencing of new content. The task of analysis then becomes paying attention to the possibilities of formulating experience in ways that are not immediately automatic. The “choice” to formulate experience in new ways can be both a conscious and unconscious one.

World Horizon: Stolorow and colleagues have articulated a different conception of the unconscious than the Freudian one. They have suggested an alternative to what they view as the Cartesian isolated mind with compartments such as unconscious, unconscious and preconscious, or id, ego and superego. They advanced the case for a multiply contextualised experiential world constituted intersubjectivity, and consisting of the sum of the individual’s lived experience. This “World Horizon” (Stolorow et al. 2002) is “more or less conscious” and constitutes a system rather than a container. The ordering principles of the world horizon consist of expectations, meanings, and interpretative patterns formed in the context of significant life events such as trauma, loss, and other psychological injuries and are “prereflectively unconscious” (Atwood and Stolorow 19791984). They cite Gadamer’s view that whatever the person is unable to know or feel, falls outside the world horizons (Gadamer 1975).

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Ten Seminal Papers in Relational Psychoanalysis https://www.confer.uk.com/module-study-guide/relational/paper-seminal-2.html Fri, 10 May 2019 18:40:08 +0000 http://www.confereducation.com/wp/?post_type=module_study_guide&p=4316 Confer

1. Stern DB (1983) Unformulated experience: From familiar chaos to creative disorder. Contemporary Psychoanalysis 19(1): 71-99. The importance of this paper lies in Stern's presentation of his influential concept of "unformulated experience". Stern's thesis, in opposition to classical Freudian views on repression, is that there are no fully formulated thoughts or cognitions kept outside of awareness waiting to [...]

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1.
Stern DB (1983) Unformulated experience: From familiar chaos to creative disorder. Contemporary Psychoanalysis 19(1): 71-99.

The importance of this paper lies in Stern’s presentation of his influential concept of “unformulated experience”. Stern’s thesis, in opposition to classical Freudian views on repression, is that there are no fully formulated thoughts or cognitions kept outside of awareness waiting to be revealed by the analyst. Instead, they appear in an inchoate form that Stern attempts to define in the remainder of the paper. In Freud’s account meaning is fully formulated and available to be put into words if resistance can be overcome.

However, unformulated experience can be defensively kept at the state of a “familiar chaos” (p. 74). Stern does not discount repressed experience either, but argues that for such a thing to be possible, meaning has to be fully formulated in the first place. He traces the concept of unformulated experience back to Sullivan’s observation that “(m)uch of that which is ordinarily said to be repressed is merely unformulated (1940: 185). Subsequently, Stern turns to more recent evidence to support his thesis. We also encounter the use of the term “constructivism” (p. 78), although in this paper it is used within the framework of cognitive psychology, as the current alternative to associationist views assuming equivalence between reality and perception. Constructivism and social constructionism were to become important philosophical positions of many relational analysts.

2.
Ghent E (1990) Masochism, submission, surrender: Masochism as a Perversion of Surrender. Contemporary Psychoanalysis 26: 108-136.

Drawing on a number of Winnicottian concepts, Ghent attempts to clarify the meaning of surrender as a concept distinct from masochism and submission. It refers to the self’s surrender to the ego as the antidote to the false self’s resistance and commitment to the status quo. Submission is an agent of resistance and at best an adaptation of perceived necessity. Ghent speculates on the existence of a wish to for the true self to experience a rebirth, to “come clean” of all the defences in the service of this notion to surrender. This wish that is essentially one of being recognised by the Other. Ghent enumerates some of the characteristics of surrender highlighting its difference from submission. Acceptance is an outcome of surrender, resignation an outcome of submission.

Ghent often references the difference between West and East, defeat and yielding, information and transformation, with a clear position against the limitations of the west. He references Marion Milner’s work on art, and other sources as he attempts to articulate the phenomenology of surrendering, attempting to hypothesise the developmental origins of this phenomenon. He does not see it as an inherent drive towards self-integration, but as a need towards restitution where development has become stunted. It appears as something complex that can sometimes be confused with depression, withdrawal or even psychosis. The wish to surrender occupies a boundary between wish and fear, as it involves facing the dread that originally resulted in the formation of the false self. This “controlled dissolution of self-boundaries is at times sought, not only feared” (p. 116). He likens it to Winnicott’s fear of breakdown, the dread of experiencing a breakdown that has already occurred, but also the wish to remember it.

However, masochism can also masquerade as “the passionate longing to surrender” (p. 115). The fruits of masochistic submission do not fulfil the promise of surrender and in fact Ghent sees masochism as a wished for patterned impingement that echoes an original experience of impingement during infancy. The individual is largely defined by their reactions to the environment rather than “finding” the environment and creating an individual experience. Likewise rape fantasies may conceal such a wish to surrender and orgasmic experience is the most tangible form of surrender.

Furthermore, reckless endangerment of life, as well as the “pull to manifest infantilism and helpless demandingness” (p. 119) are failed manifestations of surrender. Ghent offers two compelling clinical vignettes to illustrate how the expression of surrender is intimately interweaved with masochism (pp. 119-120) and, at least initially, seeks recourse to masochism. Additionally, Ghent sees sadism as the perversion of object usage. The transition from object-relating to object-usage involves the survival of the object and the realization that the object exists in “reality”, outside the self. Sadism is thus seen as a perversion of a wish to penetrate the other in order to know the other. Ghent continues thinking about the dilemma between the wish for and fear of surrender by examining instances of repetition-compulsion.

3.
The first issue of Psychoanalytic Dialogues:

(a) Aron L (1991) The patient’s experience of the analyst’s subjectivity. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 1(1): 29-51.

As the title suggests, Aron see the analyst’s examination of the patient’s experience of the analyst’s subjectivity as a central aspect of the analytic work. Aron starting point is both developmental and feminist critiques related to the precise role of the mother (or presumably the primary caregiver) in the infant’s life. Aron emphasizes a line of thought that argues that seeing the m/other as a “separate” object is insufficient articulation of her role. Additionally, the development of “intersubjectivity (p. 31) refers to a separate developmental line (Benjamin 1988) that concerns the infant’s capacity to perceive the mother as a separate person with her own agency, initiative and desire (Aron 1991: 31). Aron explicitly cites Benjamin’s work as an influence and clarifies that his own understanding of intersubjectivity is different from “Intersubjective Psychoanalysis” (see Stolorow and Atwood’s work).

Aron believes that clinical psychoanalysis has not sufficiently considered the patient’s experience of the analyst as a centre of subjective experience. Traditional psychoanalysis in his view has applied the term countertransference to the totality of the analyst’s responsiveness to the patient. In contrast, he believes that the analyst is not simply reacting or responding to the patient, but can initiate interactions. He believes that the relationship between analyst and patient, although unequal and asymmetrical, is one of “mutual influence” (a topic he would later expand on) as Beebe and Lachmann (1988a, 1988b) have proposed. Aron references previous analytic publications from a variety of authors who argue that the earliest reality of the infant is the mother’s unconscious and that the infant is wired to seek an understanding of the mother’s psychology. This means that the infant, unconsciously, forms opinions about the mother’s own relationship to her own parents and the mother’s attitude towards the infant.

Given the centrality of curiosity about a caregiver’s mind during development, Aron attemtps to transfer the implications of this argument into the analytic situation. One of Aron’s points is that a patients’ resistance is patterned according to their unconscious perception of the analyst’s also unconscious psychology. For a resistance to be successful it has to be tailored to this particular analyst’s psychology. Rather than simply emanating from the patient’s idiosyncratic history, it also includes aspects of the analyst’s personality that the latter is not aware of. The analysis of resistance therefore not only educates the patient about unconscious aspects of their own psychology, but also that of the analyst. Aron continuously emphasizes that the analyst’s psychology refers to more than the countertransference, more than just the analyst’s responsiveness to this particular patient. Consequently, the patient’s insight extends beyond the confines of their own unconscious to encompass an progressive understanding of the analyst’s own repressed or dissociated material. However, because the patient is unconsciously aware that these aspects of the analyst are being kept outside the analyst’s awareness, the patient is likely to communicate about them only directly. Finally, the patients’ desire to know their analysts is not simply viewed as an attempt to control or retaliate, but as a fundamental need to connect with someone important to them.

The clinical implication is that Aron will ask patients to reflect on what had led them to believe that he is acting in a particular way towards them. He stressed that this question needs to be asked in a genuine attempt to learn something that he might not have previously been aware of. Aron believes that the patient may have indeed noticed something about him that he is not aware of yet. However, this is not a technique he recommends to be used out of context as he will often interpret the patient’s curiosity as a defensive maneuver to deflect attention from the patient’s present emotional state. If it is true that the patient’s resistance is partly due to their anxiety to formulating to themselves and the analyst what they perceive to be the analyst’s unconscious material, then the analysis of resistance need to illuminate obstacles to verbalizing these ideas. The patient may be frightened that the analyst will retaliate, withdraw, or collapse if the analyst’s unconscious is exposed by the client.

Another clinical implication concerns self-disclosure. Having been invited or “tantalized” (Aron 1991: 40) to elaborate on the analyst’s experience means that the patients may put mncreased pressure to confirm or refute the patent’s views: As such this line of questioning may be foreclosed due to the analyst’s anxiety about self-disclosure. Additionally, the analyst’s self-disclosure would communicate that the analyst states what he feels of thinks as if he or she is assuming full consciousness of their current mental state.

One of the risks with this approach is that the analyst’s subjectivity could take over the patient’s psychic and analytic space. Furthermore, a central consideration should be that the patient may need to find the analyst as a separate person at their own rate: To be allowed to struggle with ambiguity, lack of resolution, uncertainty, and partial clarity.

4.
(b) Hoffman IZ (1991) Discussion: Toward a social?constructivist view of the psychoanalytic situation. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 1(1):74-105.

A common theme in these papers by Modell, Aron, and Greenberg is an emphasis on the importance of the personal presence and participation of the analyst in the psychoanalytic process. A real, personal relationship of some kind is thought to develop inevitably. The only options have to do with whether or how the patient and the analyst attend to it, choices that will, in turn, affect the quality of the experience for both participants. (Hoffman 1991:75)

Although this paper is a commentary to articles by Aron and Modell published in the same issue of Psychoanalytic Dialogues, it is an influential and often cited paper because it addresses RP’s emerging ontological and epistemological shifts that were beginning to form a distinct emphasis in American analytic thought. Hoffman clarifies that he is not commenting on a the shift from a drive to a relational model, but a move from positivism to contructivism/perspectivalism: This was, at the time, a germinal and somewhat implicit thesis underlying Aron’s, Model’s, and Greenberg’s attention to the patient’s experience of the analyst, and the “real” relationship that eventually develops in the analytic situation. Hoffman sees such a position as the only real acknowledgment of the analyst’s involvement in the analytic process:

(a) The analyst’s participation affects his understanding of the clinical process.
(b) The analyst participates with the totality of his personality, conscious and unconscious.
(c) As a result of (a) and (b) the analyst’s understanding is only a perspective at any one given moment and one that is vulnerable to distortions from the analyst’s unconscious resistance.
(d) Likewise, the patient’s perspective is subject to the same conditions. It is not simply fantasy, but the outcome of the realisation of “unformulated experience” (Stern 1997).

The next part of the paper is an elaboration of Hoffman’s view that relational does not equate social-constructivist. “Any divorcing of the intrapsychic and the interpersonal is unacceptable in this model (p. 82). He references different parts of Aron’s, and Greenberg’s papers, teasing out elements that appear to illuminate his understanding of what actions are in line with a constructivist paradigm, whilst also acknowledging that often analysts act differently to their public theories.

5.
Davies Messler J (1994) Love in the afternoon: A relational reconsideration of desire and dread in the countertransference. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 4: 153-170.

This paper is particularly interesting because it negotiates a particular kind of self-disclosure by the analyst, that of sexual feelings and fantasies to the patient. A case vignette is presented where an otherwise inhibited young man discusses his sexual fantasies towards the analyst, but appears to shut down just at those moments that the analyst is about to speak and comment. Davies reports having tried to address this issue for a long time and in many ways without success, until she decides to share with her patient that she too has fantasies about him. Of particular interest is the idea she proposes that expecting a patient to take a risk and express something despite the anticipated fear of humiliation or abuse can sometimes become ineffectual if the analyst is not prepared to take the same risk. She emphasises that it is particularly with patients that have fallen victim to child sexual abuse that the need to acknowledge what has happened becomes of central importance. The implication is that honesty and integrity from the analyst can become catalysts in the working through of such past traumas.

6.
Ogden TH (1994) The Analytic Third: Working with intersubjective clinical facts. International Journal of Psycho-Analysis 75: 3-19.

Although usually considered a relational psychoanalyst, Ogden put forward a highly influential paper that has enriched the understanding of intersubjectivity as understood in relational circles. This is a subject that Ogden has been writting about since the 1970’s, and his starting point is British psychoanalysis. Ogden starts from Winnicott’s notion that there is no such thing as a baby, but only a maternal couple. Ogden presents a clinical example that details his own free associations during his patient’s speech. He emphasises how events, ideas, recollections, bodily sensations, though part of Ogden’s own psychology and history, are created anew as analytic objects cathected with a significance that belongs to neither analytic participant, but emerge as the outcome of the couple’s intersubjective meeting. In other words, whatever the analyst thinks about during the analytic hour is bound to not only be affected by the analysand, but actually carry meaning about the nature of the unfolding analytic relationship.

7.
Bromberg P (1996) Standing in the spaces. Contemporary Psychoanalysis 32(4): 509- 535.

The starting point for this paper is that even in “normal” people personality is not unitary but shaped by dissociation, repression and intrapsychic conflict, a view that echoes Fairbairn’s views about the centrality of splitting in the Ego (ref). In contrast, multiplicity holds primacy over unity in human beings and unitary selfhood is a healthy illusion. Bromberg discusses how this illusion exists in a dialectic of multiple self-states, the latter being in formation from the earliest days of infancy an observation that in other circles may be advanced as the context dependence of personality or in fact the fallacy of assuming a consistent self or personality in human beings. Bromberg notes that integration and linear development have often been assumed to be the normative courses in human development. However, he cites Winnicott’s distinction between true and false self as a potential precursor of the current challenge to linearity. Bromberg (p. 514) proposes the following conceptualisation of normal multiplicity of self-states:

An individual has a healthy illusion of a coherent self. One is only momentarily aware of the existence of individual self-states.

Each self state has its own reality: Values, beliefs, feelings, and perspectives.

Each self-state functions optimally without loss of communication and negotiation with, and information from other self-states.

It is ordinary for self-states be in conflict with each other.

Ordinary healthy dissociation involves cognitive and affective immersion in one self-state.

It is unusual for a self-state to function outside the sense of “me-ness”.

When the illusion of coherence is threatened by traumatic disruption that leads to intense conflict, this illusion becomes a liability if the conflict cannot be processed symbolically.

When the illusion of coherence is perceived to be a liability, dissociation develops into a defence mechanism that ensures one will not be in a position of complexity where conflict can be perceived.

The concept of “standing in the spaces” (p. 516) alludes to the healthy capacity to occupy a metaphorical position between realities and make space for experience that is not readily accommodated by the experience of me-ness of that moment. In contrast, dissociation serves an investment to maintain the separateness of self-states that does not allow the simultaneous perception of different self-states: One believes that this state of affairs has the capacity to create unbearable conflict.

The function of analytic work is to promote conflict where dissociation previously operated. In this case repression becomes possible as function of the total personality and traditional interpretative work can occur. Interpretations that address conflict and what has been repressed as a result of that conflict are not very helpful if the patient first need to be assisted in tolerating conflict, which entails a willingness to perceive mental states in oneself and others. This involves validating the patient’s experience of observing and reflecting on self-sates that he potentially hates. The paper contains a number of clinical examples aimed at illustrating the phenomenology of dissociation and the emerging capacity to hold different states of self in consciousness simultaneously.

8.
Spezzano C (1998) Listening and interpreting – How relational analysts kill time between disclosures and enactments: Commentary on papers by Bromberg and by Greenberg. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 8(2): 237-246.

This article is part of an issue of Psychoanalytic Dialogues that explored the issues of clinical judgment in relational psychoanalysis. Given that relational psychoanalysts have emphasised the importance of self-disclosure and enactment, and given their interest in newer developmental insights that privilege the emergence of intersubjectivity before subjectivity, Spezzano attempts to clarify what he sees as some misconceptions held about relational psychoanalysis.

He asserts that relational analysts do assume that childhood representations affect the way a patient perceives the world and others and they do indeed interpret these as they manifest in the analytic relationship. However, they also assume that what emerges in the analytic space is a co-construction. The analyst is also a spokesperson for the analytic community and interested in how a patient relates to analytic discourse as well as the analyst. Spezzano continues by further examining the issue of self-disclosure and contrasts clinical examples that may highlight the more classical technique of concentrating on the patient’s mind during a transference reaction, as opposed to acknowledging the potential utility of the analyst disclosing an aspect of his or her subjectivity. He proposes that the analyst must constantly be asking how much self-disclosure can serve the analytic function of understanding and containment and how much it allows the client to experiment with different relational styles.

9.
Benjamin J (2004) Beyond doer and done to: An intersubjective view of thirdness. The Psychoanalytic Quarterly LXXIII(1): 5-46.

This is one of Benjamin’s newer papers where her previously articulated concepts of the “third” and “mutual recognition” are used to advance understanding of intersubjecitivty and challenge classical analytic assumptions about technique. She defines intersubjectivity as a relationship of mutual recognition (Benjamin 20042009). Mutual recognition refers to the perception and acknowledgement of another person as a subject who has a similar and yet separate mind. This is in contrast to the perception of one participant as a subject that “does” something to the other, who is then left feeling as an object that has been “done to” (Benjamin 2004). The difference between a subject-subject and a subject-object relationship is the difference between reciprocity (two-way directionality) and complementarity (one-way directionality). A subject-subject relationship in Benjamin’s view (2004) requires the position of a “third”: This is not an object (such as the analyst’s theory), but a sort of mental space that Benjamin likens to Winnicott’s potential space. “Surrendering” to the third implies achieving a state of freedom involving accepting connectedness and difference rather than occupying a position of control and coercion.

For Benjamin (2004, 2009) a crucial component of the analyst’s surrender translates in practice into acknowledging their own feelings as well as their own responsibility for the state of an enactment. Benjamin (2004) criticises the position often taken by object relations theorists who try to discern “who does what to whom” in the analysand’s narrative and transference, an outcome of the theoretical position that the analysand’s mind is populated by internal objects that “do” to the analysand and the analysand “does to them”. These object relationships, the related affects and thoughts, the defences against these affects constitute at any time the analysand’s unconscious phantasy, expressed in the here and now of the analytic encounter. In contrast Benjamin (2009) argues that, at least some of the time, the analyst’s taking up a position of observation can constitute a dissociative distancing from the way that the analyst inevitably wounds the analysand in the process of helping him or her. When the analyst’s conduct has shamed or wounded in some way the analysand, the analyst struggles with their own shame and guilt. Benjamin argues for the importance of the analyst remaining in touch with these feelings in the service of undergoing a process of mutual self-regulation with the analysand. Like many other relational analysts Benjamin (2009) considers that hurting the analysand is an inevitable part of the work, i.e. enactment of some sort is unavoidable. She considers that “moments of excess that fail to evoke a mirroring knowledge can serve instead to signal the unformulated, undifferentiated malaise, despair or fear” (Benjamin 2009: 441). In other words enactment is the only way to access dissociated parts of the self. However, the analyst’s capacity to forgive himself or herself is an important part of the work.

10.
Beebe B and Lachmann A (2002) Organizing principles of interaction from infant research and the lifespan prediction of attachment: Application to adult treatment. Journal of Infant, Child & Adolescent Psychotherapy 2(4): 61-89.

The struggle to symbolize the implicit action level can be seen as one of the major goals of psychoanalysis (Bucci 1985, 1997). The nature of the symbolization can then potentially affect the implicit action level. However, therapeutic action proceeds in both these modes, whether or not they are integrated� Attachment researchers share the assumption that mental models of relationships are open to revision. However, they differ in emphasizing personal continuity versus dyadic transaction and transformation; they differ in the degree to which these mental models are seen as co-constructed, transformational processes, organized as a function not only of the individual, but of the relationship pattern. (Beebe and Lachmann 2002: 65).

Beatrice Beebe and Frank Lachmann (Beebe and Lachmann 1988a1988b19941998, Lachmann and Beebe 1996) have developed a model of change based on the microanalysis of on moment-to-moment mother and infant interactions as well as a non-linear dyadic systems theory. Patient-therapist interactions, like mother-infant exchanges, are co-constructed, resulting in a relationship that may be asymmetrical, but that involves each partner “regulating the other”. Self-regulation refers to an individual’s capacity to modulate their states of arousal, that is to self-comfort/self-sooth and organise one’s behaviour in predictable ways. Interactive regulation is seen as an ongoing process that is constructed moment-by-moment by both participants. Both patient and therapist affect the process of interactive regulation based on their own capacities for self-regulation at the time that are specific both in style and range.

In this more recent and oft cited paper, Beebe and Bachmann investigate (a) vocal rhythm co-ordination, (b) facial mirroring, and (c) distress regulation. The authors’ thesis is that these three processes mediate all attachment based/intimate relationships across the lifespan from infancy onwards: They predict attachment patterns at one year of age, and attachment patterns at that point predict adult attachment. In this article, Beebe and Bachmann recapitulate their theory of (a) mutual regulation and (b) implicit relational knowing. The first concept flows from a “dyadic systems” view. All interactions between mother and infant, patient and analyst are co-constructed. Mutual influence involves each participant regulating his or her own self and the self of the other, and these forms of regulation are integrated. This process of mutual influence is not necessarily equal or symmetrical, and that is unambiguously the case for the analytic relationship. Beebe and Lachmann underscore that “bi-directional coordination refers to the probability that one person’s behavioral stream can be predicted from that of the other, and vice versa” (p. 64). The clinical implication of this model is that both patient and analyst affect each other and each participant’s subjectivity is an emergent process.

Implicit relational knowing involves interpersonal expectations that become represented at an implicit-procedural level starting from infancy, and long before explicit-symbolic representations develop. These expectations arise out of the infant’s capacity to influence and be influenced by the mother and to therefore regulate his or her own self and that of the mother. This results in developing sense of self as agent able to influence and predict the behaviour of others and also their own. The implication of these concept is that “rhythms of dialogue” involving the expectation of particular patterns of facial, voice, rhythm and orientation recognition between two partners. They are procedurally encoded action sequences. These operate alongside and outside of the explicit symbolic realm unless differentiated from and integrated with each other in psychoanalysis.

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Relational Psychoanalysis – a theoretical summary https://www.confer.uk.com/module-study-guide/relational/paper-theoretical.html Fri, 10 May 2019 18:38:56 +0000 http://www.confereducation.com/wp/?post_type=module_study_guide&p=4314 Confer

The aim of this study aid is to present the work of some of the most influential relational psychoanalysts (RP) and psychoanalytic psychotherapists working in the United Kingdom and United States of America. The term "relational" was first used in a psychoanalytic context by Greenberg and Mitchell (1983) to describe, retrospectively, a group of analytic [...]

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The aim of this study aid is to present the work of some of the most influential relational psychoanalysts (RP) and psychoanalytic psychotherapists working in the United Kingdom and United States of America. The term “relational” was first used in a psychoanalytic context by Greenberg and Mitchell (1983) to describe, retrospectively, a group of analytic theorists who privileged the individual’s need for relationships as opposed to the expression of intrapsychic drives. Like many other clinical frameworks, RP it is not a homogenous body of work. However, it can be provisionally understood as an extension of interpersonal psychoanalysis (IP), a movement that arose out of the work of Harry Stack Sullivan, an American psychiatrist who described his work as “interpersonal psychiatry” (Evans, 2006; Sullivan, 19401953196219641965).

It is possible to suggest that the main concern of relational analysts has been a re-examination of psychoanalysis’ ontological and epistemological positions. Concepts such as analytic neutrality, the division between subject and object, the location of agency and responsibility in the analytic dyad, the nature of the analysts’ claims to knowledge, and the notion of truth have all been subjected to scrutiny. For example, in recent debates in analytic journals, British authors have emphasised that psychoanalysis should retain its modernist focus and search for the “truth” of the patient’s experience. Relational analysts tend to emphasise a postmodern position, and a constructionist and contextualist view of truth.

Mills (2005) provided a thorough critique of relational psychoanalysis from within the relational camp. He was particularly admonishing of the insufficient elaboration of philosophical concepts despite the relationalists’ professed interest in revising Freudian metapsychology from a postmodernist point of view. However he has suggested that the relational approach has provided many innovations in clinical practice. He argued that, overall, analytic relationships within relational analyses may resemble ordinary social interactions, with the proviso that these more raw and tense encounters are also placed under the lens of analytic scrutiny. According to Mills (2005) the following may be distinct characteristics of the conduct of many relational analysts:

(a) (They) “behave in ways that are more personable, authentic, humane, and reciprocal rather than reserved, clinically detached, and withholding” (p. 28). Analysts convey more “interpersonal warmth” (p. 28).

(b) There appears to be more of a dialogue between analyst and analysand rather than a monologue by the analysand.

(c) There appears to be less interpretation and emphasis on insight, and more attention paid to the analysand’s affective state.

(d) Relational analysts are more likely to disclose their internal states to the analysand.

(e) Relational analysts are more likely to behave in ordinary social ways rather than appear withholding, frustrating, and unsatisfying.

In the sections that follow, we attempt to provide an overview of the work of some of the key figures in relational psychoanalysis in order to demonstrate the above propositions.

Harry Stack Sullivan

Harry Stack Sullivan was a psychiatrist who worked and wrote in the 1930’s, 1940’s, and 1950’s. Sullivan did not train as a psychoanalyst, but his work was deeply influenced by Freud and often emerged in opposition to the traditional Freudian emphasis on biologically determined drives and intrapsychic conflict as key motivators of human development and psychopathology (Sullivan 19401953196219641965). The task of developing an interpersonal psychoanalysis was actually taken up by some of his contemporaries such as Erich Fromm, Frieda Fromm, Karen Horney, and Clara Thompson.

Mitchell (1988), writing about the distinction between the intrapsychic and the interpersonal, observed that he had not been able to find a reference to the intrapsychic in Sullivan’s writings. Instead, he argued that Sullivan’s emphasis on using the term interpersonal was an attempt to take a position of contrast to Kraepelin’s psychiatry by insisting on the term “interpersonal psychiatry”. Mitchell argued that the distinction between intrapsychic and interpersonal was a later invention designed to differentiate relational from “classical” psychoanalysis in retrospect (Mitchell 1988).

Sullivan’s focus, from the beginning of his work, centred on a critique of Freud’s view that the individual mind should be the object of study in therapy. Sullivan argued against the idea that the individual mind has firm boundaries that only at times makes contact with other persons or cultural entities (Mitchell 1988: 478Sullivan, 1964: 33). In contrast, he saw the human mind as being in continuous contact and interaction with others, from infancy onwards. The individual’s sense of his or her own self was an outcome of these interpersonal interactions. Because of this emphasis, Sullivan’s writing often paid much less attention to interiority, although he did not oppose the idea that persons develop unique subjectivities.

Sullivan introduced a number of key concepts in order to advance his vision of an interpersonal psychiatry. To begin with, like John Bowlby (196919731980) and Joseph Sandler in the UK, Sullivan believed that the primary human motivation was the attainment of security. One of Sullivan’s ongoing investigations involved the notion of unconsciousness, although he never made a reference to the “unconscious” as such. However, many of his concepts allude to a form of unconsciousness or unawareness. Sullivan makes a distinction between three different states of self: Me, bad-me, and not-me. The “me” states are the ones that an individual allows free conscious access to. The “bad-me” states refer to aspects of the self that, although unacceptable, can be brought to awareness without severe distress being experienced. In contrast, not-me states refer to a person’s views of the self that must not become conscious. These states have to be dissociated and interpersonal encounters have to be managed so that not-me states remain outside an individual’s attention. A person’s efforts to keep the preferred me states into awareness are achieved through “selective inattention”.

Despite Sullivan’s emphasis on the fact that the analyst affects the interpersonal encounter through his or her participation, Sullivan was still confident that through careful self-reflection the analyst would be able to factor out that contribution. Sullivan viewed the therapist as an expert in relationships and as being able to unproblematic able to adopt the position of a participant-observer. As we will see below, interpersonal and relational analysts take issue with this position. In summary, many of Sullivan’s concepts can be potentially understood as arising out of deliberate attempts to reframe Freudian insights into interpersonal language, given the similarities that sometimes appear between Sullivanian and Freudian terms.

Heinz Kohut

Kohut is widely considered to be one of the most influential psychoanalysts based in the USA. Although he trained and initially practiced in the framework of the ego psychology of his time, Kohut’s work with narcissistic patients and his formulation of “narcissistic rage” (Kohut 197119771984) provided the springboard for a paradigm shift in American psychoanalysis. Kohut was particularly interested in the role of empathy and would, at least some of the time, argue that psychoanalytic data could only be investigated through empathy and introspection. Additionally, he placed developmental deficit at the core of his analytic thinking.

Kohut assumed that narcissism, linked to self-esteem, constituted a distinct developmental line. He proposed that narcissistic pathology was the outcome when the necessary grandiosity and exhibitionism of the infant self had not been adequately “mirrored” by an early caregiver. When this was possible, and the inevitable frustrations were stage appropriate, the child would internalise the mirroring function of the parent in a process he called “transmutative internalisation”. He conceptualised the parent as a “self-object” whose role was to provide such a function based on empathic attunement. Clinically, patients who had not had a sufficiently attuned self-object would seek this in the analyst by forming specific attachments, observed in the transference. Once the developmentally arrested self was mobilised in analysis, three types of such selfobject relationships would be possible: Mirroring, idealizing, and twinship. In the first instance, the analysand would seek admiration and praise from the analyst. Another strategy would be to idealise the analyst as someone the patient cannot compare to and is therefore not threatened by. In the last instance, the analysand envisions the analyst as a partner in joint idealisation. Kohut would advocate that through the use of empathy the analyst should to some extent provide that function and, like the original selfobject, allow the inevitable frustrations to promote an ordinary giving up of exhibitionism and grandiosity in current life. Eventually, Kohut extended his developmental theory to the entire spectrum of psychological difficulties. Fonagy and Target (2003) cite the clinical example of agoraphobia to illustrate this: In agoraphobia, for instance, the failure of the selfobject has resulted in a developmental arrest of the child’s self-soothing capacities. Later in life, healthy assertiveness and affection that have not been mirrored are experienced as hostility and inappropriate sexual expression.

A general criticism of Kohut’s work (e.g. Fonagy and Target 2003) then concerns this latter point, regarding the generalisation the insights he developed by studying narcissistic pathology to a fundamental theory of personality development relevant to every individual. Likewise, intersubjective psychoanalysis (see below), which is an offspring of self-psychology, has further elaborated that this move resulted in a reversal of what had started as a contextualist psychoanalytic perspective and in the reification of the self as an overarching construct. All said and done, his emphasis on empathic attunement appears to have reached a number of clinicians, not necessarily of psychoanalytic persuasion.

Stephen Mitchell (23/07/1946 – 21/12/2000)

In 1983 Stephen A. Mitchell and Jay R. Greenberg (Greenberg and Mitchell, 1983) authored a landmark integrative psychoanalytic text entitled Object Relations in Psychoanalytic Theory. The purpose of this book was to juxtapose two different psychoanalytic traditions: One based on drives and one based on relationships. They coined the term “relational” in this context to designate a number of theoreticians who had departed from Freud’s drive model to place relationships with others at the heart of psychoanalytic enquiry. The relational stream in this book included British Object Relations (the “English” school of Melanie Klein and the “British” school of those practicing in the Independent tradition of the British Psychoanalytical Society, such as Balint, Fairbairn, and Winnicott) and the American school of self-psychology.

Mitchell presented his ideas as representing a position from the camp of Sullivanian interpersonal psychoanalysis (Mitchell 1988), establishing himself through the publication of key articles and books in the years that followed (Fonagy and Target 2003). Mitchell chose to break with the drive model altogether, unlike Greenberg who later attempt to find a middle point of view incorporating drive and relational perspectives. Mitchell proposed the concept of a “relational matrix” that included both the intrapsychic and the interpersonal (Mitchell 1988), in order to argue for the Sullivanian position that the mind is inherently relational and not an isolated entity that evolves under the pressure of internal drives. Mitchell occupied a position that is now mirrored in developmentally informed psychoanalytic psychology (Fonagy et al. 2002). However, he eschewed both a Freudian conflict model emphasising incompatible wishes and a British/American deficit model concerned with developmental arrest. Instead, he formulated the idea of conflict between relational configurations (Fonagy and Target 2003). Unlike hard interpersonalists, Mitchell was interested in the interface between fantasy and reality rather than real anxiety arising in the context of interpersonal exchanges (Fonagy and Target 2003). Mitchell reworked a number of psychoanalytic concepts such as sexuality, aggression, and narcissism from a relational point of view (Mitchell 1988). Sexuality and aggression were not seen as strictly biological forces, but ones that were evoked in response to either an internal or external object, suggesting that biology can only be given meaning in the context of relationships and the relatively stable interpersonal expectations that develop from infancy onwards. Mitchell conceptualised psychopathology as the rigidity of relational configurations that were sustained because they were perceived to be necessary to survival in infancy and early childhood. They are the only familiar routes to minimizing anxiety in interpersonal contexts (Mitchell 1988). Likewise, he rejected the idea of an unconflicted developmentally arrested “baby self” that requires mirroring and recognition, instead seeing the adoption of such a position as a particular way of relating to others (Fonagy and Target 2003).

Finally, Mitchell’s ideas not only offered a thorough and insightful integration and clarification of psychoanalytic models, but also kick-started the tradition of relational psychoanalysis as an American entity. Generally speaking, there has been an abandonment of the Cartesian dualism that is inherent in classical psychoanalysis and the adoption of a view that emphasises the construction, rather than discovery, of meaning within an interpersonal context, and an emphasis on pragmatism and what works, rather than seeking pre-established truths about the individual.

Philip M. Bromberg

(T)he human personality possesses the extraordinary capacity to negotiate continuity and change simultaneously, and will do so under the right relational conditions (Bromberg 1996: 509) .

Philip M. Bromberg is a New York based psychoanalyst who has always identified with the interpersonal/relational tradition and has built on aspects of Sullivan’s work (e.g. Bromberg 19791980). A recent special issue of the journal Contemporary Psychoanalysis, a publication by the William Alanson White Institute where he and other relational psychoanalysts like Stephen A. Mitchell have taught, celebrates his work and contributions. Bromberg started to publish his work in 1974 often in the above US journal Contemporary Psychoanalysis. He first used of the term “relational perspective” and “relational matrix” in the first issued of the journal Psychoanalytic Dialogues (Bromberg 1991: 91991: 11), in the title of a publication in 1993 in the journal of the American Psychological Association‘s Division (39) of Psychoanalysis‘ Psychoanalytic Psychology.

Like Donnel B. Stern (see next session) and Stephen A. Mitchell, Bromberg (2006) was interested in the Unconscious, a concept he believed was being neglected by many hardliner interpersonal psychoanalysts. One of Bromberg’s oft cited concepts related to unconsciousness is that of “self-states” (Bromberg 19962006: 31). Bromberg sees selfhood as a “shifting configuration of mental states” (Bromberg, 2006: 32). In an optimal situation there is a fluid shifting between these different self-states while the individual is able to retain self-cohesion and self-validation in the face of novel experiences. Developmentally, this process is made possible through the attainment of affect regulation in early parent-infant relationships. However, in certain psychopathologies, different self-states are isolated from each other so that at any one time one self-state colonises consciousness.

Bromberg sees trauma from a developmental perspective, as the outcome of invalidation of states of being (Bromberg 1996). These experiences are linked to a threat of the infant being overwhelmed with affect without the possibility of becoming able to symbolise the experience. Dissociation is used as a defence to allow an escape from this situation. The use of dissociation at this stage leads to the formation of separate self-states that are kept isolated, with a resultant impoverishment of the self as a whole. In his most recent book (Bromberg, 2011) he describes the experience of living with trauma as living in the “shadow of the tsunami”. He conceptualises therapeutic action as the outcome of an ongoing encounter between the subjectivities of analyst and patient that involves “shrinking the “tsunami” little by little. One aspect of therapeutic action involves the patient’s capacity to symbolise previously non-verbal material that has become dissociated (Bromberg 2006).

An aspect of Bromberg’s work that appears to characterise the majority of relational psychoanalytic views is that these dissociated states cannot become known simply through interpretation, but require an enactment to take place between analyst and patient. Part of the enactment is a process of “objectification” (Bromberg 2006: 34). The patient objectifies an aspect of the self as being an aspect of the object, here the analyst. The analyst likewise may objectify the patient as the site of where the enactment is coming from, because of his or her own dissociation. This view is also prominent in the work of Jessica Benjamin (see below). This situation represents a lack of intersubjectivity that needs to be restored. At some point, Bromberg believes, the analyst stops seeing the patient as simply repeating something from the past and acknowledges the situation as occurring in the here and now between the two participants. Both parties can then begin to compare their perceived realities through a process of dialogue. The process of shrinking the tsunami involves the repetition and experience of these enactments allowing each time more of the dissociated inexperience to be integrated in the patient’s core self. Bromberg’s disclosure of personal experience, feelings, wishes, desires, and uncertainty during these exchanges may well be a staple of relational work.

Donnel B. Stern

I conceptualize unconscious psychic life as unformulated experience, vague psychic material that, under the right circumstances, becomes articulated or realized meaning. Unformulated experience is potential meaning, and in that way quite different from the fully formed meanings that are assumed in theories based on the concept of unconscious fantasy (Italics mine, Stern 2010: xiii).

Stern is another interpersonal/relational analyst trained at the William Alanson White Institute that has been inspired by the works of Sullivan. Like Bromberg, Stern is particularly interested in dissociation and enactment, and like Bromberg and Mitchell, his work involves maintaining the concept of an “unconscious”. Stern (1997) speaks of “unformulated experience” to designate that which is dissociated and therefore unconscious. Like Bromberg he makes use of Sullivan’s me, bad-me, and not-me distinctions to explain the outcomes of dissociation. Stern initially linked enactment to countertransference phenomena (Stern 1997) before explicitly linking enactment to dissociation.

Stern (2010) adopts a post-modernist view that assumes there is no pre-existing meaning waiting to be revealed or discovered, but rather potentially able to be formulated within a relational context. Stern is at pains to emphasise that this position does not constitute relativism, where any meaning is possible, but rather that the possible meanings that can be formulated are delimited by pre-existing experience. He references the “relational or interpersonal field” that is created between analyst and analysand, without each participant’s awareness, and which shapes what they experience together. This relational field affects what they also experience in their own minds in the presence of each other, and often outside this presence. Stern also emphasises the continuity of clinical process by highlighting that the experience that is constructed between the two analytic participants’ influences the experience that follows. It would appear that Stern takes up a critical realist position describing his theory as mid-way between objectivism and relativism. What delimits the formulation of unformulated experience in the analytic encounter is a structure encompassing culture, history, and tradition that places constraints in how “reality” (although existing) is apprehended. These constraints can be “tight” or loose”. Unformulated experience is not located in a compartment of the mind’s topography as envisioned by Freud, but in relatedness. Each participant is creating experience and constituted by it so that, as mentioned before, transference and countertransference are seen as arising from a selection of available possibilities. They are not simply distortions of each participant’s experience, but they are based on rigidity rather than flexibility. They do not easily change with experience and can prevent the experiencing of new content. The task of analysis then becomes paying attention to the possibilities of formulating experience in ways that are not immediately automatic. The “choice” to formulate experience in new ways can be both a conscious and unconscious one. A dream, for example, may have been unconsciously dreamt in order to alert the analytic pair to new possibilities for meaning making that were previously unconsidered. Stern accepts the existence of character, but emphasises that different aspects of character are expressed in different contexts.

Stern (2010) also replaced repression with dissociation as the primary defensive process. In his reconceptualization of unformulated experience, he emphasises that newly formulated experience occurs not only in the verbal, but also in the non-verbal register, referring to “articulation” and “realization” respectively. He argues that although certain experiences can be formulated either in symbolic verbal terms or in non-verbal ones, dissociated content is such that it will not be formulated. Stern employs Sullivan’s distinction of me, bad-me, and not-me (Sullivan 1953Bromberg 199620062011). Although, bad-me aspects of the self can be tolerated in consciousness when they become formulated during the analytic process, not-me aspects resist formulation and can only become known through enactment. Therefore, what is dissociated is not particular mental content, but specific aspects of identity. Stern is therefore in agreement with Bromberg who takes a similar position about enactment. If the analysand cannot and will not inhabit the dissociated self-states that may be at risk of being formulated during a relational interaction, then the analyst will be pressed to experience these self-states instead. This is referred to as the “interpersonalisation of dissociation” (Stern 2010: 14). Stern also refers to “passive dissociation”, “dissociation in the weak sense”, or “narrative rigidity” (Stern 2010: 14) to indicate the strategy of living a narrative that does not allow the individual to be faced with circumstances that can lead to not-me states. In highlighting the analyst’s participation, Stern talks of mutual enactment when the words or conduct of the patient who is defending against a not-me state activate dissociated material in the analyst. Not-me states are not necessarily the outcome of external trauma. Dissociation is seen a form of extreme selective inattention (Sullivan 1953).

Finally, Stern is amongst those interpersonal/relational analysts (e.g. Orange 2011) who have drawn on the complex body of work of Hans-Georg Gadamer (1975) to advance an understanding of clinical process based on hermeneutics and the concept of “authentic dialogue”. Stern (2010: 25) sees dissociation and enactment as the unconsciously motivated interruption of authentic dialogue. Authentic dialogue involves the immersion of the two participants in a process that does not lead to a predestined outcome set by either conversant, but has a life of its own and leads to understanding. Understanding refers to grasping another person’s point of view by accepting it as right, and using one’s own understanding in the process. Subjectivity and conversation are constrained by historical embeddedness that can be taken into account, and even transcended, but ultimately cannot be pushed aside.

Intersubjective Psychoanalysis: Robert Stolorow, George E. Atwood, Donna Orange, and Bernard Brandchaft

These authors have a background in self-psychology and along with a number of other colleagues have been responsible for a particular conception of relational psychoanalysis called “intersubjective psychoanalysis” (Atwood 2012Atwood and Stolorow 197919842014Stolorow 20072011Stolorow and Atwood 1992Stolorow, Atwood and Orange 2002Stolorow, Brandchaft and Atwood 1995Stolorow, Atwood and Branchaft B 1994). Stolorow and colleagues have articulated a different conception of the unconscious than the Freudian one. They have suggested an alternative to what they view as the Cartesian isolated mind with compartments such as unconscious, unconscious and preconscious, or id, ego and superego. They advanced the case for a multiply contextualised experiential world constituted intersubjectivity, and consisting of the sum of the individual’s lived experience. This “World Horizon” (Stolorow et al. 2002) is “more or less conscious” and constitutes a system rather than a container. The ordering principles of the world horizon consist of expectations, meanings, and interpretative patterns formed in the context of significant life events such as trauma, loss, and other psychological injuries and are “prereflectively unconscious” (Atwood and Stolorow 19791984). They cite Gadamer’s view that whatever the person is unable to know or feel, falls outside the world horizons (Gadamer 1975).

These authors’ view of unconscious is multifaceted. Their starting point is that a child becomes able to develop and articulate his or her conscious experience in a progressive manner dependent on the attunement of the early caregivers. If there is a lack of consistency in responding or an active rejection of the child’s experiences, the child concludes that these experiences, constituting part of their total subjectivity, are unwanted or even destructive to the caregiver. There is therefore a mutilation of the child’s experiential world to reduce it to those aspects of subjective experience that do not threaten their attachment to their caregivers. This formulation is the closest that these authors come to repression. They link this process to Stern’s (2010) views of unformulated experience, but instead describe it as “dysformulated experience” to distinguish it from experiences that have never achieved any symbolic form. For these experiences they reserve the term “unvalidated unconscious” to designate experiences that in the absence of validating responses were never formulated in the first place. It is this group that closely resembles Stern’s view. As mentioned earlier, there is also the “prereflective unconscious” which cannot be made conscious because it is an organising principle of experience rather than experiential content, and closely resembles Sandler’s “past unconscious” or Bollas’ “unthought known”. In psychology’s terms this is “procedural” knowledge (see Confer’s online module Clinical Applications of Attachment Theory) and could be said to become intelligible in the way that individuals relate to each other, elsewhere the transference and defences. It is important hold in mind that Stolorow and colleagues do not use terms such as “defences” because in their framework of World Horizons, there is no subject-object or thought-feeling distinction. Rather defences are seen as the multitude of ways in which the horizons are limited by the prereflective organising principles that govern their breadth. The interested reader can consult (Stolorow et al. 2002) for a one of Stolorow’s analytic training cases, originally formulated in ego-psychological terms, that has now been re-evaluated within the framework of World Horizons.

We mentioned earlier that the version of psychoanalysis articulated by Stolorow and colleagues has been explicitly named “intersubjective psychoanalysis” and is based on a number of key challenges to the Cartesian model of the mind adopted by Freud and his followers. The emphasis on intersubjectivity eschews the view of an individual mind in relationship to its objects, in a manner again not broadly dissimilar to the work of most relational psychoanalysts. Stolorow and colleagues’ see the work of psychoanalysts as being contextualised historically, an approach drawn from hermeneutics. In addition, one of Stolorow’s collaborators, Donna Orange (Orange 20102011), has elaborated Stolorow’s contextualist view into a formal ontological and epistemological position by advancing the position of “perspectival realism”. This is a form of critical realism and contextualism that assumes an individual can only apprehend reality through their current perspective, delimited by their social and historical location. Therefore, analyst and analysand each have their own grasp of the analytic encounter and the task of the couple becomes and comparison of their respective views in the form of an “authentic dialogue” in Gadamer’s (1975) sense.

Andrew Samuels

Samuels is a Jungian analyst with the UK based Society of Analytical Psychology. In addition to being a historian of Jungian thought, Samuels has been a staunch proponent of the relational analytic approach (e.g. Lowenthal and Samuels 2014). In his recent writings he has been refining his contribution to the political arena, both in real world politics and, like Orbach (2014) in “democratising” psychoanalysis and investigating the social dimensions of clinical work. Samuels (2014) endorses Jung’s view, articulated in the 1930’s, of creating a culturally relevant psychology that is sensitive to how the social environment etches itself in the individual psyche. Jung’s concept of the “transcendent function” is used as an entry point into understanding the contribution of analysis to politics. Just like the commonly held relational view of the inevitable participation of the analyst in the process, he criticises those analysts who engage with two different sides in politics, but attempt to maintain a dispassionate external standpoint throughout the process, a function he refers to as “triangulation” (Samuels 2014). He sees triangulation as the epitome of a “phobia” towards action, referring possibly to psychoanalysis’ traditional concern about acting out. “For politics is, quintessentially, a process in which unequals dispute and contest control of power resources and information” (Samuels 2010: 245). The transcendent function paints the analysand as attempting, at times, to obtain an equal standing in the asymmetrical nature of the analytic relationship. Historically, Samuels emphasises that armed conflict may be a necessary complement of dialogue between opposites perhaps alluding to the nature of enactment in analysis.

Samuels describes himself as a pluralist and gives a personal account of his personal and professional life (Samuels 2014). Because he considers the analytic relationship to be an “induced” (Samuels, 2014: 646) rather than a natural relationship, and one that embodies the structures of analytic history itself, his sees the potential of transference as an outcome of suggestion and less the product of the analysand’s involvement. He also sees the emphasis on countertransference as omitting the impact of the wider social context, for example what an analysand’s network thinks of therapy. He also cautions against assuming transferential potential to any reference to other persons or communication, but argues for accepting the reality of the analysand’s accounts. This is specifically the case for instance in interpreting a concern with a political situation is only as a preoccupation with a family situation and preventing the impact on an analysand of the “collective field of emotional distress” (Samuels 2014: 647). Finally, he argues that the emphasis on the analysand being able to achieve a relationship with the analyst may exclude the reality that the patient is already in other relationships in his or her life. He sees the emphasis in the relationship, the idea that the client’s well-being is defined by their capacity to relate to the therapist, as a potential factor that can undermine the client’s autonomy. Instead Samuels (2014) proposes a conceptualisation of the client as a healer, of themselves and others, someone who knows what they need, possesses in innate capacity for self-regulation in the Jungian sense, and one who may be more emotionally literate than they allow themselves to be in the context of a relationship. One of Samuels’ rather radical propositions is that the client can become a healer of the world, become in touch with their inner diversity and respond in a politically activist manner to “repair and restore the world” (Samuels 2014: 650).

Susie Orbach

Susie Obach is a UK based relational psychoanalytic psychotherapist who is perhaps best known for her work on eating disorders from within a feminist framework. Orbach describes her perception of the way that many analysts in the UK were practicing in 1984 when the Kleinian tradition was at its most influential. This extract is quoted at length as it likely captures the sentiment of many relational analysts:

(T)he patient � had become not so much an individual to be engaged with, as someone whose defense structure needed to be excavated to show the patient how much of his or her internal world was beset by envy and destructiveness. � The countertransference material was evaluated for what the patient “did,” and “put into”; for how he or she “showed contempt” or “attacked” the analyst or the analysis. � The patient, who invariably didn’t know the rules of therapy, would somehow transgress them. He or she would comment on the books on the therapist’s shelves (envy of the analyst’s knowledge or distrust of the analyst’s capacity to think without props), say hello on bumping into the therapist in the street (invading and inappropriate), talk too much (controlling the space), talk too little (not allowing anything to penetrate), feel too much (being unable to think), or not have sufficient affect (defending against desperation, devastation, depression), compliment the therapist for how the therapy was helping (seductive and avoiding), arrive early (overanxious) or late (controlling), or induce in the therapist the desire to care for him or her (manipulating the therapist) � (p. 398).

Orbach (2014) also conceptualises the analyst as “an active participant in the relational field”. She sees relational psychoanalysis as offering a “democratic” view of the analytic situation in which the analyst is not a neutral observer, but brings his own or her own subjectivity into the clinical process. She emphasises the rigidity of what she sees as British psychoanalytic interpretation of making specific interpretations of uncomfortable countertransference experience (as above). She urges clinicians to reflect on their own responses by paying careful attention to the context of the analysand’s communications rather than relying on premade formulations about what the analysand is “putting into” the analyst. Orbach references the work of analytically informed developmental researchers such as Beebe (see Confer’s online module on the Clinical Applications of Attachment Theory). She emphasises that within the relational model, conflict is conceptualised as a discrepancy between the desire to connect and to be a distinct self and the requirement that in order to form connections one’s distinctiveness must be recognised by the other.

Jessica Benjamin

Benjamin’s contributions to an “intersubjective” perspective in psychoanalysis centre on the concepts of the “third” and “mutual recognition”. She has written a number of papers on gender and has contributed to the clinical use of developmental research (Benjamin 2002). She defines mutual recognition as the core element of intersubjectivity (Benjamin 1990:33) and later equates intersubjectivity with a relationship of mutual recognition (Benjamin 20042009). Mutual recognition (Benjamin 1990) refers to the perception and acknowledgement of another person as a subject who has a similar and yet separate mind. Benjamin’s concern throughout her writing career is the move away from what she sees as the limitations of subject-object relationships to subject-subject relationships. She sees this as not simply a lack of linguistic lack of precision, but an implicit position that affects the conceptualisation of analytic work.

For Benjamin, the development of the capacity for mutual recognition follows a separate developmental line to the internalisation of objects relations (Benjamin 19881990). Her starting point is Mahler’s individuation-separation theory (Mahler 1975) viewed through the lens of Winnicott and Stern (1985) in an effort to realise what she sees as the theory’s unfulfilled potential. She sees a parallel between the infant’s struggle to develop intersubjective capacities and the struggle involved in analytic work that aims to transform the viewing of others from objects to subjects. This preoccupation echoes wide analytic formulations that view the increasing complexity of internal object representations as a sign of maturity and development, but Benjamin is keen to pick apart the way that this difficulty may also be at work in the analyst’s mind and the development of analytic theory. She sees the work of intersubjective psychoanalysts (see section above) and the adoption of “intersubjectivity” in the psychoanalytic lexicon as the first useful steps. She also refers to Winnicott’s “use of the object” as a radical position statement anticipating her concern with the difference between the “other perceived as outside the self and the subjectively conceived object” (Benjamin 1990: 34). She also insists on the need to hold on to both the intrapsychic and the interpersonal mind.

Benjamin explains that for the subject to experience the fullness of his or her own subjectivity in the other’s presence, the other must also be experienced as a subject. This need translates into the drive to recognise others and the need to be recognised in our own right. Developmentally, being recognised by the other results in a sense of having made an impact on someone else’s mind, and our sense of enjoyment at this is then also recognised by this other. Self-regulation is the outcome of regulating the other: Each participant calibrates how stimulating he or she is towards the other. This also means that the response of the baby can leave the mother feeling unrecognised. Although the awareness of other minds does not occur until 8-9 months, the affective interactions at an early stage of development set the ground for what is to follow. In the second year of life, a crisis develops between the need to assert the self and recognise the other. The paradox according to Benjamin is that at the moment when one’s will is asserted, one needs another to recognise it. The resolution to this dilemma is, again paradoxically, holding on to the tension in that it cannot be resolved.

This view is in contrast to the perception of one participant as a subject that “does” something to the other, who is then left feeling as an object that has been “done to” (Benjamin 2004). The difference between a subject-subject and a subject-object relationship is the difference between reciprocity (two-way directionality) and complementarity (one-way directionality). A subject-subject relationship in Benjamin’s view (2004) requires the position of a “third”: This is not an object (such as the analyst’s theory), but a sort of mental space that Benjamin likens to Winnicott’s potential space. “Surrendering” (Ghent 1990) to the third implies achieving a state of freedom involving accepting connectedness and difference rather than occupying a position of control and coercion.

For Benjamin (20042009) a crucial component of the analyst’s surrender translates in practice into acknowledging their own feelings as well as their own responsibility for the state of an enactment. Benjamin (2004) criticises the position often taken by object relations theorists who try to discern “who does what to whom” in the analysand’s narrative and in the transference, an outcome of the theoretical position that the analysand’s mind is populated by internal objects that “do” to the analysand and to whom the analysand “does”. These object relationships, the related affects and thoughts, the defences against these affects constitute at any time the analysand’s unconscious phantasy, expressed in the here and now of the analytic encounter. In contrast, Benjamin (2009) argues that, at least some of the time, the analyst’s taking up a position of observation can constitute a dissociative distancing from the way that the analyst inevitably wounds the analysand in the process of helping him or her. When the analyst’s conduct has shamed or wounded in some way the analysand, the analyst struggles with their own shame and guilt. Benjamin argues for the importance of the analyst remaining in touch with these feelings in the service of undergoing a process of mutual self-regulation with the analysand. Like many other relational analysts Benjamin (2009) considers that hurting the analysand is an inevitable part of the work, i.e. enactments of some sort are unavoidable. She considers that “moments of excess that fail to evoke a mirroring knowledge can serve instead to signal the unformulated, undifferentiated malaise, despair or fear” (Benjamin 2009: 441). In other words enactment is the only way to access dissociated parts of the self. However, the analyst’s capacity to forgive himself or herself is an important part of the work too.

Lewis Aron

Lew Aron is a NY based relational psychoanalyst. He started to publish in 1989 in journals such as Contemporary Psychoanalysis, and Psychoanalytic Dialogues and published a key paper in the first issues of Psychoanalytic Dialogues (Aron 1991). Aron has made a number of contributions on “democratising” psychoanalysis, exploring its sociocultural assumptions, and elaborating Benjamin’s formulation of subject-subject relations by articulating his own understanding of how clinical technique flows from such conceptual revisions. Aron see the analyst’s examination of the patient’s experience of the analyst’s subjectivity as a central aspect of the analytic work. He believes that clinical psychoanalysis has not sufficiently considered the patient’s experience of the analyst as a centre of subjective experience. Traditional psychoanalysis in his view has applied the term countertransference to the totality of the analyst’s responsiveness to the patient. In contrast, he believes that the analyst is not simply reacting or responding to the patient, but can initiate interactions. He believes that the relationship between analyst and patient, although unequal and asymmetrical, is one of “mutual influence” (a topic he would later expand on) as Beebe and Lachmann (1988a1988b) have proposed.

One of Aron’s arguments (1991) is that a patient’s resistance is patterned according to their unconscious perception of the analyst’s unconscious psychology. For resistance to be successful it has to be tailored to this particular analyst’s personality, rather than simply expressing the patient’s idiosyncratic history. Aron continuously stresses that the analyst’s psychology refers to more than the countertransference, more than just the analyst’s responsiveness to this particular patient. Consequently, the patient’s insight extend beyond the confines of his or her own unconscious to encompass a progressive understanding of the analyst’s own repressed or dissociated material. However, because the patient is unconsciously aware that these aspects of the analysts are being kept outside the analyst’s awareness, they are likely to communicate about them only directly. Finally, the patients’ desire to know their analysts is not simply viewed as an attempt to control or retaliate, but as a fundamental need to connect with someone important to them.

One clinical implication is that Aron will ask patients to reflect on what had led them to believe that he is acting in a particular way towards them. He stresses that this question needs to be asked in a genuine attempt to learn something that he might not have previously been aware of. Aron believes that the patient may have indeed noticed something about him that he is not aware of yet. However, this is not a technique he recommends to be used out of context as he will often interpret the patient’s curiosity as a defensive manoeuvre to deflect attention from the patient’s present emotional state. Furthermore, questioning in this way may risk accessing one the more conscious aspects of the patient’s experience: If it is true that the patient’s resistance is partly due to their anxiety about formulating to themselves and the analyst what they perceive to be the analyst’s unconscious material, then the analysis of resistance needs to illuminate obstacles to verbalising these ideas. The patient may be frightened that the analyst will retaliate, withdraw, or collapse if the analyst’s unconscious is exposed.

Another clinical implication concerns self-disclosure. Having been invited or “tantalised (Aron 1991: 40) to elaborate on the analyst’s experience means that the patient may put increased pressure to confirm or refute the patent’s views: As such, this line of questioning may be foreclosed due to the analyst’s anxiety about self-disclosure. Additionally, the analyst’s self-disclosure would communicate that the analyst states what he feels of thinks as if he or she is assuming full consciousness of their current mental state. Another risk with this approach is that the analyst’s subjectivity could take over the patient’s psychic and analytic space. Furthermore, a central consideration should be that the patient may need to find the analyst as a separate person at their own rate: To be allowed to struggle with ambiguity, lack of resolution, uncertainty, and partial clarity.

Adrienne Harris

Adrienne Harris has been in the faculty of the New York University’s Post-Doctoral Program in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy for over two decades. Her first contribution was in 1985 on the impact of hermeneutics and Jacque Lacan’s work in American psychoanalysis. This paper also introduced readers to her enduring interest in feminism and gender, and particularly gender as a social construct rather than a natural category. Her next publication (Harris 1991) consolidated her position as a committed gender theorist in American psychoanalysis. Her thesis was that gender is a paradox: Either an aspect of the self or a defence, it can be coherent or incoherent. Her starting point was Freud’s essay on a case of female homosexuality and her project centred on situating Freud’s analysis in a historical context, discussing his ideas through the lenses of social theory in an effort to highlight Freud’s own contradictions. Gender, Harris argued, can be as solid as any other aspect of character, or vulnerable and fragile. Multiple gender identifications and sexualities can be integrated in an individual’s personality or split off. Female and male identifications are complicated by individual histories as well as both the parents’ and broader social contexts’ explicit and implicit views on sexuality and gender.

In 2011 Harris published a review of the relational tradition in psychoanalysis. She referenced a discussion held among prominent relational analysts that attempted to address a number of questions, starting with identifying the intellectual origins of American analysis. William James’ pragmatism and Charles S. Pierce’s semiotics were identified. James’ emphasis on experience, rather than abstraction, as the starting point of scientific investigation, and his interest in the “intersections” of private, relational, and publicly shared beliefs were seen as important predecessors of relational psychoanalysis current foci. Specifically, Harris saw relational psychoanalysts, starting with Mitchell’s work in the 1980’s, as being particularly interested in perspectivalism and the evaluation of theory and technique in its own right.

Muriel Dimen

Dimen is an American psychoanalyst who, like Adrienne Harris, has maintained an ongoing commitment to the exploration of gender and sexuality, as well as culture. She is adjunct clinical professor in NYU’s Postdoctoral Program in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy. She started to publish her analytic work in 1991 in Psychoanalytic Dialogues on gender with a starting point in Winnicott’s work, a choice that is not uncommon in relational circles. She has authored a number of books that can be found here.

Recently, Dimen and colleagues have elaborated a relational theory that allows for the social aspect of any given clinical moment to be taken into account alongside the psychological realities (Dimen 2011). The aim of the book illustrates the work of a group that assumes culture saturates subjective experience and both the social and psychological aspect of a clinical moment can both be considered without sacrificing either.

Neil Altman

Neil Altman has contributed important work on deconstructing the intersect of poverty and psychodynamic treatment. He is particularly interested in internalized racism in analytic theory and practice and to the influence of class (2005), race (2000), and politics (2004) as blind spots in the transference and countertransference. He has played a significant role in advancing relational theory as Editor of the journal Psychoanalytic Dialogues.

Doris Brothers

Brothers is a US based psychologist who identifies with a self-psychology approach and whose written work centres on the understanding of trauma. Like Bromberg (2006) (see below) Brothers (2008) stresses the disruption in continuity of the child’s sense of self due to early developmental failure or injury. She argues that when trauma occurs the result is a shattering of familiarity, loss of meaning, and loss of a coherent and recognisable sense of self. She proposes that trauma destroys what she calls “systemic emergent certainties” (SECs) that are subsequently replaced by “trauma generated certitudes” (TGCs). TGC’s use the mechanism of dissociation to exclude emotional knowledge and experience that threaten to disrupt the continuity of the traumatised self. The effect of dissociation is a loss in context sensitivity so that the same expectations come to be generalised across a vast range of situations resulting in the experience of post-traumatic symptomatology. The traumatised individual feels under threat from the affective expressions of the others, because the complexity of these presents a threat to the rigid and simplistic TGCs. Brother’s model also provides an explanatory framework for the intergenerational transition of trauma (see Confer’s online module of the same name). Because of the parent’s resulting failure to respond to the infant’s complex emotional behaviour, the infant also fails to advance his or her own sense of self in an ordinary developmental fashion due to the parent’s restricted affective responsiveness. The required therapeutic approach in Brothers’ model is broadly commensurate with the approaches of other relational analysts that emphasise not the uncovering of repressed emotional states but the reciprocal development of self-regulation through the experience of an analytic encounter based on mutuality and the understanding and processing of enactment as the only avenue of widening the experiential potential of the analysand.

Jeremy Safran

Jeremy Safran is not a psychoanalytically oriented therapist, but an integrator of different psychological therapies. He is well known for having emphasised the importance of the therapeutic relationship in CBT in a landmark text in 1992. He has also published about psychoanalysis, the therapeutic relationship, and the intersection between psychoanalysis and Buddhism. A list of his books can be found here. Safran writes eloquently about the therapeutic function of metacommunication in relational psychoanalysis, the capacity to talk with the patient about the quality of communication between them and the therapist. He is influential in creating a bridge between the technique of mindfulness, affect regulation and this communicative capacity. Safran argues that mindfulness can make a powerful contribution to the therapist’s self-regulation, thus allowing the time and space to process powerful feelings evoked in enactments. Enactments, he proposes, are a product of the therapists and patient’s overlapping psyches.

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