'Raluca Soreanu has become an indispensable thinker in contemporary psychoanalysis. With dazzling precision, she shows that the psyche’s fragments are not detritus but lively actors in trauma, memory, and repair. This book outlines a 'minor psychoanalysis' of scars, organs, catastrophe—an audacious re-staging of Ferenczi that re-opens psychoanalysis to its most experimental, timely, and unruly possibilities.'Patricia Gherovici, psychoanalyst and author of Transgender Psychoanalysis'Soreanu’s return to Ferenczi, like Lacan’s return to Freud, levers us not into the past but a transformational future, a new psychoanalytic imaginary that is oblique, tentacular, visceral, surreal, decolonial. Here is a vocabulary of pliable elements, mimicry, asynchronous temporalities, fluid bodies, mosaics of dead and alive fragments – a psyche sensorially gripped and dismembered by the scars of time, but endowed with radically creative capacities and modes of registration and survival. Compelling, poetic, and precise, anchored throughout in luminous clinical narratives and a rigorous didactic concern with process, this is an epoch-making contribution to the emergent Ferenczian tradition: rerouting the mainstream into fascinating, life-preserving waters.' Matt Ffytche, Professor of Psychoanalytic Studies, University of Essex and Editor, Psychoanalysis and History'In her strikingly lyrical text, Raluca Soreanu elucidates what ‘being in fragments’ might mean psychically. Drawing on the work of Sándor Ferenczi, Soreanu takes us beyond the static and repetitive temporalities of dissociation and splitting, and suggests that rather than the discarded elements of trauma, psychic fragments have a life of their own. Through clinical vignettes she shows us how patient and analyst can create a montage of such fragments, producing transformations in suffering through the co-creation of new and surprising forms of psychic life. Breathtakingly original, Soreanu offers us an entirely new thesis on trauma.'Lisa Baraitser, Psychoanalyst and Professor of Psychosocial Theory, Birkbeck, University of London, UK