Talking Bodies
Image credit: Cuban dance troupe "Ballet Revolución" 2014, photo by Theatrepix.

An Embodied Psychoanalytic Revisioning of Theory

Recorded Friday 15 July 2022

With Dr Doris Brothers and Dr Jon Sletvold

CPD Credits: 3 hours

In this theoretical and experiential workshop, Doris Brothers and Jon Sletvold will present the body-based perspective they are developing in their forthcoming book A New Vision of Psychoanalytic Theory, Practice and Supervision: Talking Bodies to re-explore some of the most enduring aspects of psychoanalytic theory.

They will attempt to demonstrate how changes in conceptualization of the therapeutic process, and the discourse in which this is described, result in transformations in the therapeutic relationship as well as in the supervisory process.

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SPEAKERS

Dr Doris BrothersJon Sletvold,

FULL PROGRAMME

A New Language For Psychoanalysis
In the hope of foregrounding the emotional bases of therapeutic communication, Doris and Jon will suggest that we replace concept-based words or phrases with body-based language that allows therapists to feel the meaning of what is communicated between bodies. They will explain how using the words I, you, we and world changes psychoanalytic descriptive communication. Optimally, we would shift fluidly, effortlessly, and without conscious awareness from one aspect of the overlapping complexity of I, you, we, and world to another. This would allow us to fully experience embodied wholeness, However, because we all live in a traumatised and traumatising world, we tend to emphasise one or another of these foci of attention at the expense of the others. They will elaborate with theory and examples.

Q&A

A Body-Based View of Transference
Ever since Freud’s earliest efforts to develop his theory of transference, memory has played a key role. Narratives, and the embodied non-verbal memories on which they are based, are central to a new understanding of transference. When viewed from the perspective of the ever-changing memories of both patient and therapist, transference is seen as a slowing or freezing of the flow of I, you, we and world. Brothers and Sletvold propose that it is only in the context of trauma that transferences become rigidified.

Q&A

A Body-Based View of Resistance
What makes therapeutic change so difficult? Brothers and Sletvold propose that the freedom to change can be terrifying. When trauma is viewed from a body-based perspective it becomes clear that what has been called resistance often involves fear of losing one’s connections to all that is needed for one’s psychological well-being. When efforts are made to deepen the embodied we-connectedness of patient and therapist, the fear of change is reduced for both therapeutic partners. Illustrative clinical examples will be presented. The Sletvold-Brothers model of embodied supervision is introduced which makes use of I, you, we, and world. Our speakers will describe this supervision process and give some examples from supervision groups that they have run.

Q&A

FEES

Includes: 1 year’s access, test and CPD Certificate of Attendance, and subtitles

INDIVIDUAL

£60 (or £48 Confer member)

GROUP RATE

£50pp in groups of over 10 (please apply to accounts@confer.uk.com)

CPD

Continuing Professional Development (CPD) credits for 3 hours are available as part of the course fee. You will need to pass a multiple choice questionnaire related to the content in order to receive your certificate. You can submit this test up to a maximum of 5 times.

SCHEDULE

00:03:31
A New Language For Psychoanalysis

00:27:57
Q&A

00:57:27
A Body-Based View of Transference

01:21:01
Q&A

01:55:23
A Body-Based View of Resistance

02:25:32
Q&A

03:16:37
End