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Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2024-02-01
- Mått120 x 165 x 11 mm
- Vikt248 g
- FormatHäftad
- SpråkEngelska
- SeriePhoenix Publishing House
- Antal sidor162
- FörlagKarnac Books
- ISBN9781800132467
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Salman Akhtar, MD, is Professor of Psychiatry at Jefferson Medical College and a Training and Supervising Analyst at the Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia. He has served on the editorial boards of the International Journal of Psychoanalysis, the Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, and the Psychoanalytic Quarterly. His more than 400 publications include 105 books, of which the following 22 are solo-authored: Broken Structures (1992), Quest for Answers (1995), Inner Torment (1999), Immigration and Identity (1999), New Clinical Realms (2003), Objects of Our Desire (2005), Regarding Others (2007), Turning Points in Dynamic Psychotherapy (2009), The Damaged Core (2009), Comprehensive Dictionary of Psychoanalysis (2009), Immigration and Acculturation (2011), Matters of Life and Death (2011), The Book of Emotions (2012), Psychoanalytic Listening (2013), Good Stuff (2013), Sources of Suffering (2014), No Holds Barred (2016), A Web of Sorrow (2017), Mind, Culture, and Global Unrest (2018), Silent Virtues (2019), Tales of Transformation (2021), and In Leaps and Bounds (2022). Dr Akhtar has delivered many prestigious invited lectures including a Plenary Address at the 2nd International Congress of the International Society for the Study of Personality Disorders in Oslo, Norway (1991), an Invited Plenary Paper at the 2nd International Margaret S. Mahler Symposium in Cologne, Germany (1993), an Invited Plenary Paper at the Rencontre Franco-Americaine de Psychanalyse meeting in Paris, France (1994), a Keynote Address at the 43rd IPA Congress in Rio de Janiero, Brazil (2005), the Plenary Address at the 150th Freud Birthday Celebration sponsored by the Dutch Psychoanalytic Society and the Embassy of Austria in Leiden, Holland (2006), the Inaugural Address at the first IPA-Asia Congress in Beijing, China (2010), and the Plenary Address at the Fall Meetings of the American Psychoanalytic Association in 2017. Dr Akhtar is the recipient of numerous awards including the American Psychoanalytic Association’s Edith Sabshin Award (2000), Columbia University’s Robert Liebert Award for Distinguished Contributions to Applied Psychoanalysis (2004), the American Psychiatric Association’s Kun Po Soo Award (2004) and Irma Bland Award for being the Outstanding Teacher of Psychiatric Residents in the country (2005). He received the highly prestigious Sigourney Award (2012) for distinguished contributions to psychoanalysis. In 2103, he gave the Commencement Address at graduation ceremonies of the Smith College School of Social Work in Northampton, MA. Dr Akhtar’s books have been translated in many languages, including German, Italian, Korean, Romanian, Serbian, Spanish, and Turkish. A true Renaissance man, Dr Akhtar has served as the Film Review Editor for the International Journal of Psychoanalysis, and is currently serving as the Book Review Editor for the International Journal of Applied Psychoanalytic Studies. He has published 11 collections of poetry and serves as a Scholar-in-Residence at the Inter-Act Theatre Company in Philadelphia.
- ContentsIntroductionPart IPreparation1. Reading Freud2. Three ‘must read’ papers by Ferenczi3. Children, animals, and poetry4. Alternate professions5. Life style requirements6. Silent sacrifices7. Seeking diverse supervision8. Setting up an office9. A mysterious rug10. Entering a world of ambiguity11. Reading, reading and reading12. Borrowed faithPart IIPrinciples13. Mental health vs. mental illness14. A mentally healthy person15. Half-sane, half-insane16. Happy and unhappy children17. Peek-a-boo18. Hunger, vision, and the rhythms of nature19. Learning from children20. The non-human envelope21. Toy shops are not for kids22. Spirituality vs. religion23. Sex–aggression–sex24. Metapsychology25. Two major updates on metapsychology26. ‘Bad’ death instinct, ‘good’ death instinct27. Six misunderstandings about death in psychoanalysis28. Three reactions to separation29. Two griefs that last a lifetime30. What happens to the deceased’s possessions?31. A crowded preconscious32. Receiving vs. taking33. Reaction formation and undoing34. Even Unabomber …35. Double-bind36. The unknown, the unmet, and the unlived37. Where does an aborted childhood go?38. Being emotional vs. being sentimental39. Feeling ‘at home’40. Who should change?41. Toxic nobility42. Basic trust, earned trust, and mutual trust43. Good enough revenge44. Where the ego was …45. Two ‘great crimes’46. Detachment theoryPart IIIPractice47. Who picks the day and time for the first appointment48. Abstinence49. Safeguarding the sacred nature of the clinical space50. Restroom51. Where is Rome?52. Hearing is essential for listening53. Floating couch54. Does the analyst’s gender matter?55. No ‘correct’ way of laying on the couch56. Handling patients’ questions57. Doodling etc.58. Addressing the analyst by his/her professional title59. Not asking about actual sex60. Before and after61. About defecation and feces62. Diminishing frequency of sessions63. Chronic lateness64. The use of a deliberately wrong interpretation65. Small gifts given by immigrant patients66. Refusing to listen to certain kinds of material67. Being special68. Pleasure and mental illness69. ‘Insane chemistry’70. Demystification71. Imaginary interlocutors72. When not to give the bill to a patient?73. Humility74. Which form of racism is worse?75. Masochistic funnel76. The novelist and the poet77. Analyst’s boredom78. Analyst’s financial status79. Where does the analyst look?80. Insight addiction81. Three different outcomes82. Why not this at the end?83. The fate of the analyst’s bills84. Uttering an adult patient’s first name85. Procrastination and nail biting86. Stillness87. Cats, not dogs88. Countertransference sublimation89. Financial extremesPart IVProfession90. The second beard91. Psychiatry and psychoanalysis92. Do we need a prefix to ‘psychoanalysis’?93. Jewish psychoanalysis, Christian psychoanalysis94. Pauses95. Writers and non-writers96. Analysts’ memoirs97. Was Bion Hindu?98. PEP vetting99. Age-specific writing100. The ‘domestication’ of wild analysis101. Childless child analysts102. Three tips for supervisors103. Non-analyst friends104. The future of psychoanalysis105. Blood killing106. Un-associated and un-affiliated107. The analyst’s funeral108. Analysts turned gurus109. Taboos110. The analyst’s dog111. Alternate pathwaysAcknowledgmentsAbout the authorName index
‘Salman Akhtar distils his decades of clinical experience into pithy and poetic reflections on psychoanalytic theory and practice. His book, In Short, is a rare gem offering a thoughtful and provocative inquiry in both the prosaic and the profound facets of our profession.’
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