"This is an important collection on the subject of psychosomatic disorders as seen in psychoanalysis. Its essentially pragmatic approach and broad-minded view is to be welcomed. The subject is not only very well discussed, it is timely: the body-mind and mind-body issues are being revisited in the context of psychosomatic disorders and what might be called soma-psychic disorders. This book is a welcome addition to the growing literature and should be read by all those interested in this vital area." --Ronald Britton, Distinguished Member British Psychoanalytical Society, IPA Outstanding Scientific Achievement Award 2013"This volume demonstrates convincingly the psychoanalytic process as an unconscious psychosomatic communication between the bodies of patients and psychoanalysts. This means that remote analysis without this basic essential, without the presence of a body, is something different from psychoanalysis." --Prof. Dr. Martin Teising, President of the International Psychoanalytic University Berlin (2012-2018), European Representative at the IPA-Board"It is clear to all those who have a bit of an interest in the theoretical configuration of international psychoanalysis that the planet "psychoanalysis" is under threat of babelisation. Each continent, each country even, if not each society, develops ‘its own’ model of psychoanalysis and even though ‘transversal’ theories thankfully exist, the latter however remain highly stamped with the cultural traits of the country where they are spoken. This is why when nine analysts from six different countries decide to meet regularly to talk about their respective clinical practices, such a project deserves to be praised and circulated accordingly. It should perhaps even be held as a model of what we must strive to develop so that European, if not global psychoanalysis, may endure as a project endowed with enough unity. As we can surmise, this is not an easy undertaking, but it is a necessary one, as necessary as the need to think about the obstacles encountered in the course of the exchanges. The very object of this book is to embark upon this adventure and account for it as accurately and honestly as possible. The fact that it should have come together on the topic of psychosomatics is probably not a coincidence: the body, the clinic of the body, the language of the body, might well aptly provide the kind of transversality required for this initial endeavour which, let us hope, will inspire many more." --Prof. René Roussillon, Training and supervising analyst of the Paris Psychoanalytical Society, Maurice Bouvet Prize 1991, Sigourney IPA Prize 2016, Member of the Research in Psychoanalysis Committee and Psychoanalysis at the University Committee of the IPA"There remain many debates within the field of psychosomatics, and these will continue given the different theoretical traditions represented by the authors and their trainings. But in this small volume, of less than 160 pages, there is a wealth of experience, thought and wisdom, and it is therefore a pleasure to recommend it to all those in our profession who are concerned with "the mysterious leap" described by Freud, the metaphor he used to capture the shift he witnessed from the psychic to the somatic." -- The International Journal of Psychoanalysis, (102)(4):813-817