000 01466cam a2200205 4500500
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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aLafay-Amado,
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aOn Well-Tempered Interference
260 _c2011.
500 _a73
520 _aStarting from her working practice in patients’ homes, the author (a clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst) proposes a clinical reflection on such quite specific encounters and what this can teach us, especially as regards the transference issues at stake. She introduces the work of drawing up/building a process for mother-child therapy to take place in the home.In so doing, she shows how the home environment becomes a key element of the overall setting and, at the same time, a paradoxical element due to the dimension of privacy and its exclusive control by the mother. Is this specificity at the root of the cannibalistic type of representations/sensations experienced by the therapist, that of being swallowed and ingested? This perspective, hinging on the notions of intrusion and curiosity, may shed light on the question of interference: in order to intervene must one first accept being assimilated?
690 _ahome setting
690 _aintrusion
690 _amother-child therapeutic
690 _acannibalism
786 0 _nDialogue | o 192 | 2 | 2011-06-23 | p. 51-62 | 0242-8962
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-dialogue-2011-2-page-51?lang=en
999 _c153825
_d153825