Psychoanalysts’ Accounts of Their Personal Analysis
de Spengler, Nina
Psychoanalysts’ Accounts of Their Personal Analysis - 2004.
71
It is an accepted fact that personal psychoanalysis is a critical component of the psychoanalyst’s training and practice. Psychoanalysts tend to speak of their own analysis in different ways, generally by making subtle allusions to it in their theoretical and clinical papers. However, some analysts—such as H. Guntrip and M. Little—share explicit accounts of their personal analysis. This paper reviews such accounts in order to examine how such analysts conceptualize the link between their personal analysis and their daily work with patients.
Psychoanalysts’ Accounts of Their Personal Analysis - 2004.
71
It is an accepted fact that personal psychoanalysis is a critical component of the psychoanalyst’s training and practice. Psychoanalysts tend to speak of their own analysis in different ways, generally by making subtle allusions to it in their theoretical and clinical papers. However, some analysts—such as H. Guntrip and M. Little—share explicit accounts of their personal analysis. This paper reviews such accounts in order to examine how such analysts conceptualize the link between their personal analysis and their daily work with patients.
Réseaux sociaux