Psychoanalysis
Psychoanalysis is a family of psychological theories and methods based on the pioneering work of
Sigmund Freud. As a technique of
psychotherapy, psychoanalysis seeks to elucidate connections among
unconscious components of patients' mental processes. The analyst's goal is to help liberate the analysand from unexamined or unconscious barriers of
transference and resistance - that is, past patterns of relatedness that are no longer serviceable or that inhibit freedom.
Controversy rages both within and without the psychoanalytic community over whether psychoanalysis is a
science, a
pseudoscience, or something else altogether.
Psychoanalysis was first devised in Vienna in the
1890s by
Sigmund Freud, a neurologist interested in finding an effective treatment for patients with
neurotic or
hysterical symptoms. As a result of talking with these patients, Freud came to believe that their problems stemmed from culturally unacceptable, thus repressed and
unconscious, desires and fantasies of a
sexual nature. As his theory developed, Freud developed and cast aside a myriad of different frameworks to model and explain the phenomena he encountered in treating his patients.
Prominent current schools of psychoanalysis include:
*
self psychology, which emphasizes the development of a stable sense of self through mutually empathic contacts with other humans;
*
Lacanian psychoanalysis, which integrates psychoanalysis with
semiotics and
Hegelian philosophy;
*
analytical psychology, which has a more spiritual approach;
*
object relations theory, which stresses the dynamics of one's relationships with internal, fantasized, others;
*
interpersonal psychoanalysis, which accents the nuances of interpersonal interactions; and
*
relational psychoanalysis, which combines interpersonal psychoanalysis with object-relations theory. Although these schools have dramatically different theories, most of them continue to stress the strong influence of self-deception and the influence a person's past has on their current mental life.
Today psychoanalytic ideas are imbedded in the culture, especially in
childcare,
education,
literary criticism, and in
psychiatry, particularly
medical and non-medical
psychotherapy. Though there is a
mainstream of evolved analytic
ideas, there are groups who more specifically follow the
precepts of one or more of the later theoreticians.
|
Freud's patients would lie on this couch during psychoanalysis |
The basic method of psychoanalysis is the transference and resistance analysis of
free association. The patient, in a relaxed posture, is directed to say whatever comes to mind.
Dreams, hopes, wishes, and fantasies are of interest, as are recollections of early family life. Generally the analyst simply listens, making comments only when, in his or her professional
judgment, an opportunity for insight on the part of the
patient arises. In listening, the analyst attempts to maintain an attitude of
empathic neutrality, a nonjudgmental stance designed to create a safe environment. The analyst asks that the analysand speak with utter honesty about whatever comes to awareness while interpreting the patterns and inhibitions that appear in the patient's speech and other behavior.
Many clinicians hold that psychoanalysis counter-indicated in cases of serious psychological disruption, such as
psychosis, suicidal depression, or severe untreated
alcoholism. Such patients may be labeled "un-analyzable". More typical applications include treatment of
clinical depression and
personality disorders.
Some more recent forms of psychoanalysis seek, among other things, to help patients gain self-esteem through greater trust of the self, overcome the fear of death and its effects on current behavior, and maintain several relationships that appear to be incompatible.
Although single-client sessions remain the norm, psychoanalysis has been adapted as a form of
group therapy by
Harry Stack Sullivan and others.
Efficacy
Currently, most psychoanalysts claim that analysis is most useful as a method in cases of
neurosis and with character or
personality problems. Psychoanalysis is believed to be most useful in dealing with ingrained problems of intimacy and relationship and for those problems in which established patterns of life are problematic. As a therapeutic treatment, psychoanalysis generally takes three to five meetings a week and requires the amount of time for natural or normal maturational change (three to seven years).
Analysis of previous randomised controlled trials have suggested that psychoanalytic treatment is more effective than the absence of treatment in specific psychiatric disorders. [
1]. Empirical research on the efficacy of psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic psychotherapy has also become prominent among psychoanalytic researchers.
Research on psychodynamic treatment of some populations shows mixed results. Research by analysts such as Bertram Karon and colleagues at Michigan State University had suggested that when trained properly, psychodynamic therapists can be effective with schizophrenic patients. More recent research casts doubt on these claims. The
Schizophrenia Patient Outcomes Research Team (PORT)report argues in its
Recommendaton 22 against the use of psychodynamic therapy in cases of schizophrenia, noting that more trials are necessary to verify its effectiveness. However, it has been noted that the PORT recommendation is based on the opinions of clinicians rather than on empirical data, and empirical data exists that contradicts this recommendation.
link to abstract A review of current medical literature in
The Cochrane Library, (
the updated abstract of which is available online) reached the conclusion that no data exist supporting the view that psychodynamic psychotherapy is effective in treating schizophrenia.
Further, data also suggest that psychoanalysis is not effective (and possibly even detrimental) in the treatment of sex offenders.Cost and length
Although psychoanalytic treatment used to be expensive, cost today ranges from as low as ten dollars a session (with an analytic candidate in training at an institute) to over 250 dollars a session with a senior training analyst.
Length of treatment varies. Some psychodynamic approaches, such as Brief Relational Therapy (BRT), Brief Psychodynamic Therapy (BPT), and Time-Limited Dynamic Therapy (TLDP) limit treatment to 20-30 sessions. Full-fledged psychoanalysis, however, generally lasts longer- with an average of 5.7 years,
according to a recent survey. Which treatment length is optimal depends on the individual's needs.
Managed care has placed increased pressure on
psychotherapy in general to restrict time devoted to patients.
In addition to the greater length and frequency of treatment, one factor driving the cost of psychoanalysis in the United States has been the restrictive admissions policies of most training institutes, which has limited the supply of professionals available to meet demand. In Europe and Latin America, although psychoanalysis is sometimes perceived as an indulgence of the
bourgeoisie, it is still more generally available and affordable than in the US.
Training
Throughout the history of psychoanalysis, most psychoanalytic organizations have existed outside of the university setting, with a few notable exceptions.
Psychoanalytic training usually occurs at a psychoanalytic institute and may last approximately 4-10 years. Training includes coursework, supervised psychoanalytic treatment of patients, and personal psychoanalysis lasting 4 or more years.
An ongoing debate in professional psychoanalysis concerns the prior qualifications candidates must have to enter analytic training. Freud believed that applicants from the humanities and many nonmedical disciplines are as well prepared as physicians for psychoanalytic training.
The
American Psychoanalytic Association, however, limited access to training to medical doctors until quite recently. Later, after extensive debates and legal battles, psychoanalytic training in most institutes was opened to nonmedical
mental health professionals, such as
psychologists and clinical
social workers. Currently, access to training by applicants from nonclinical disciplines, such as literary studies and philosophy, is limited to a handful of institutes in the United States. By contrast, many or most institutes in Europe and Latin America admit candidates without formal clinical training.
Although the popularity of psychoanalysis was in decline during the 1980's and early 1990's, prominent psychoanalytic institutes have experienced an increase in the number of applicants in recent years.
link to articleThe theories distinctive of psychoanalysis generally include the following hypotheses:
* Human development is best understood in terms of changing objects of sexual desire.
* The psychic apparatus habitually represses wishes, usually of a sexual or aggressive nature, whereby they become preserved in one or more
unconscious systems of ideas.
*
Unconscious conflicts over repressed wishes have a tendency to manifest themselves in dreams, parapraxes ("
Freudian slips"), and symptoms.
* Unconscious conflicts are the source of
neuroses.
* Neuroses can be treated through bringing the unconscious wishes and repressed memories to consciousness in psychoanalytic treatment.
The unconscious and psychic structures
The
unconscious refers to that part of mental functioning of which
subjects make themselves unaware. The psychoanalytic unconscious is similar to but not precisely the same as the popular notion of the
subconscious. For psychoanalysis, the unconscious does not include all of what is simply not conscious - it does not include e.g. motor skills - but rather, only what is actively
repressed from conscious thought.
For Freud, the unconscious was a depository for socially unacceptable ideas, wishes or desires, traumatic memories, and painful emotions put out of mind by the mechanism of
psychological repression. However, the contents did not necessarily have to be solely negative. In the psychoanalytic view, the unconscious is a force that can only be recognized by its effects - it expresses itself in the
symptom.
The
ego, super-ego, and id are the divisions of the
psyche according to Freud's later "structural theory". The
id contains "primitive desires" (hunger, rage, and sex), the
super-ego contains internalized
norms, morality and taboos, and the
ego mediates between the two and may include or give rise to the sense of self.
Roots of neurosis
In his earliest writings on the subject, Freud theorized that all neuroses were rooted in childhood sexual abuse (the so-called
seduction theory). Later, Freud came to abandon or de-emphasize this hypothesis, emphasizing instead the importance of unconscious fantasy as the cause of neurosis, particularly fantasy structured according the the
Oedipus complex.
The
Oedipus complex is a concept developed by
Sigmund Freud to explain the origin of certain
neuroses in childhood. It is defined as a male child's unconscious desire for the exclusive love of his mother. This desire includes jealousy towards the father and the unconscious wish for that parent's death. The idea is based on the
Greek myth of
Oedipus, who unwittingly kills his father
Laius and marries his mother
Jocasta.
Freud revisited the Oedipal territory in the final essay of
Totem and Taboo. There, he combined one of
Charles Darwin's more speculative theories about the arrangements of early human societies (a single alpha-male surrounded by a harem of females, similar to the arrangement of
gorilla groupings) with the theory of the sacrifice ritual taken from
William Robertson Smith located the origins of
totemism in a singular event, whereby a band of prehistoric brothers expelled from the alpha-male group returned to kill their father, whom they both feared and respected. In this respect, Freud located the beginnings of the
Oedipus complex at the origins of human society, and postulated that all religion was in effect an extended and collective form of
guilt and ambivalence to cope with the killing of the father figure (which he saw as the true
original sin).
The life and death instincts
Freud believed that humans were driven by two conflicting central desires: the life drive (
Eros) (incorporating the sex drive) and the death drive (
Thanatos). Freud's description of Eros/Libido included all creative, life-producing drives. The
Death Drive (or death instinct) represented an urge inherent in all living things to return to a state of calm, or, ultimately, of non-existence. The presence of the Death Drive was only recognized in his later years, and the contrast between the two represents a revolution in his manner of thinking.
Post-Freudian schools
*
Object relations theory is the idea that the ego-self exists only in relation to other
objects, which may be external or internal. Internal objects are internalized versions of external objects, primarily formed from early interactions with the parents. According to object-relations theory there are three fundamental "affects" that can exist between the self and the other - attachment, frustration, and rejection. These affects are alleged to be universal emotional states that are major building blocks of the personality. Object relations theory was pioneered in the 1940's and 50's by British psychologists
Ronald Fairbairn,
D.W. Winnicott,
Harry Guntrip, and others.
*
Interpersonal psychoanalysis is based on the theories of
Harry Stack Sullivan, an American
psychiatrist who believed that the details of patient's interpersonal interactions with others provided insight into the causes and cures of
mental disorder. Sullivan argued that patients keep many aspects of interpersonal relationships out of their awareness by
selective inattention. He felt that it to be important for psychotherapists to conduct a detailed inquiry into patient's interactions with others so that patients would become optimally aware of their interpersonal patterns.
Psychoanalysis has been criticized on a variety of grounds by
Karl Popper,
Adolf Grünbaum,
Mario Bunge,
Hans Eysenck,
Ludwig Wittgenstein,
Peter Medawar,
Ernest Gellner,
Frank Cioffi,
Frederick Crews,
Arthur Janov and others. Popper argues that it is not scientific because it is not falsifiable. Grünbaum argues that it is falsifiable, and in fact turns out to be false. Janov claims that psychoanalysis intellectualizes the feeling process which only strengthens defenses. The other schools of psychology have produced alternative methods of psychotherapy, including
behavior therapy,
cognitive therapy,
primal therapy and
person centered psychotherapy. Exchanges between critics and defenders of psychoanalysis have often been so heated that they have come to be characterized as the
Freud Wars.
An important consequence of the wide variety of psychoanalytic theories is that different school of psychoanalysis criticise each other. Many critics (such as feminist critics of Freud) have attempted to offer criticisms of psychoanalysis that were in fact only criticisms of specific ideas present only in one or more theories, rather than in all of psychoanalysis. For example, it is common for critics of psychoanalysis to focus on Freud's ideas, even though only a fraction of contemporary analysts still hold to Freud's major theses. As the psychoanalytic researcher Drew Westen puts it, "Critics have typically focused on a version of psychoanalytic theoryâ€"circa 1920 at bestâ€"that few contemporary analysts find compelling...In so doing, however, they have set the terms of the public debate and have led many analysts, I believe mistakenly, down an indefensible path of trying to defend a 75 to 100-year-old version of a theory and therapy that has changed substantially since Freud laid its foundations at the turn of the century."
link to Westen articleOn the other hand, those who criticise psychoanalsys on scientific basis tend to dismiss the entire subject as pseudo science.
Scientific Validity
An early and important criticism of psychoanalysis was that its
theories were based on little quantitative and
experimental research, and instead relied almost exclusively on the
clinical case study method. In comparison, brief psychotherapy approaches such as
behavior therapy and
cognitive therapy have shown much more concern for
empirical validation (see, e.g., Morley and al. 1999). Some even accused Freud of fabrication, including the famous and miraculous cure of
Anna O. (Borch-Jacobsen, 1996).
An increasing amount of psychoanalytic research from academic
psychologists and
psychiatrists who have worked to quantify and measure psychoanalytic concepts has begun to address this criticism. However, a survey of scientific research showed that while personality traits corresponding to Freud's oral, anal, Oedipal, and genital phases can be observed, they cannot be observed as stages in the development of children, nor it be confirmed that such traits in adults result from childhood experiences (Fisher & Greenberg, 1977, p399).
E. Fuller Torrey, considered by some a leading American psychiatrist, writing in
Witchhdoctors and Psychiatrists (1986) stated that psychoanalytic theories have no more scientific basis than the theories of traditional native healers, "witchdoctors" or modern "cult" alternatives such as
est. In fact, an increasing number of scientists regard psychoanalysis as a
pseudoscience (Cioffi, F. 1998).
Among philosophers,
Karl Popper argued that Freud's theory of the unconscious was not
falsifiable, and therefore not
scientific. Popper objected not so much to the idea that things happened in our minds that we are unconscious of; he objected to investigations of mind that were not falsifiable: if one could connect every imaginable experimental outcome with Freud's theory of the unconscious mind, then no
experiment could refute the theory.
Some defenders of psychoanalysis suggest that its logics and formulations are more akin to those found in the humanities than those proper to the physical and biological sciences, though Freud himself tried to base his clinical formulations on a hypothetical neurophysiology of energy transformations. For example, the philosopher
Paul Ricoeur argued that psychoanalysis can be considered a type of textual interpretation or
hermeneutics. Like cultural critics and literary scholars, Ricoeur contended, psychoanalysts spend their time interpreting the nuances of language- the language of their patients. Ricoeur claimed that psychoanalysis emphasizes the
polyvocal or many-voiced qualities of language, focusing on utterances that mean more than one thing. Ricoeur classified psychoanalysis as a
hermeneutics of suspicion. By this he meant that psychoanalysis searches for deception in language, and thereby destabilizes our usual reliance on clear, obvious meanings.
Controversy over Efficacy
Psychoanalysts, for most of their history, have relied on the clinical case report as the chief method of evaluating the efficacy of treatment. In comparison, brief psychotherapy approaches such as
behavior therapy and
cognitive therapy have shown much more concern for
empirical validation from broad-based studies modeled after randomized pharmaceutical trials. (see, e.g., Morley and al. 1999).
At least in the United States, psychoanalysis has usually been perceived as a form of insight-based therapy, with the goal of bringing
unconscious thoughts or memories into consciousness. Some studies, however, throw doubt on whether insight is a necessary or sufficient means for improving a person's behavior or increasing their level of functioning (Fisher & Greenberg, 1977, pp411-412).
There is even a great controversy among psychologists as to whether
repressed memories actually exist. The whole
recovered memory movement, which has flourished in the United States in the last decade, is now highly criticized by the advocates of the
false memory syndrome (Loftus & Ketcham, 1994).
Psychoanalysts have often complained about the significant lack of theoretical agreement among analysts of different schools. Many authors have attempted to integrate the various theories, with limited success.
The philosopher
Jacques Derrida used psychoanalytic theory to question what he called the
metaphysics of presence, a body of philosophical theory which assumes that the meaning of utterances can be pinned down and made fully evident.
Psychoanalysis, or at least the dominant version of it, has been denounced as
patriarchal or
phallocentric by proponents of
feminist theory.
A few of the most influential psychoanalysts and theorists, philosophers and literary critics who were or are influenced by psychoanlaysis include
Alfred Adler,
Karl Abraham,
Franz Alexander,
Lou Andreas-Salomé,
Jacob Arlow,
Michael Balint,
Therese Benedek, John Benjamin,
Bruno Bettelheim,
Edward Bibring Wilfred Bion,
John Bowlby,
Charles Brenner,
Abraham A. Brill,
Ruth Mack Brunswick,
Helene Deutsch,
Françoise Dolto,
Kurt R. Eissler,
Erik Erikson,
Ronald Fairbairn,
Pierre Fédida,
Otto Fenichel,
Sandor Ferenczi,
Anna Freud,
Sigmund Freud,
Erich Fromm,
Frieda Fromm-Reichmann, Merton Gill,
Andre Green,
Ralph R. Greenson Heinz Hartmann,
Edith Jacobson,
Ernest Jones,
Carl Jung,
Otto Kernberg,
Paulina Kernberg,
Melanie Klein,
Heinz Kohut,
G. Stanley Hall,
Paula Heimann,
Karen Horney,
Luce Irigaray,
Susan S. Isaacs,
Julia Kristeva,
Jacques Lacan,
Jean Laplanche,
Bertram D. Lewin,
Hans Loewald,
Rudolf Loewenstein,
Margaret Mahler,
Adolf Meyer,
Donald Meltzer,
Karl Menninger,
Stephen A. Mitchell,
Sandor Rado,
Otto Rank,
Theodor Reik,
Joan Riviere,
Herbert Rosenfeld, David Rapaport,
Harold F Searles,
Hanna Segal,
Roy Schafer,
Melitta Schmideberg,
Sabina Spielrein,
Rene Spitz,
Daniel N. Stern,
Robert J Stoller,
Harry Stack Sullivan,
Neville Symington,
Viktor Tausk,
Frances Tustin,
Donald Winnicott, and
Slavoj Zizek.
*
Jean Laplanche et J.B. Pontalis : "The Language of Psycho-Analysis", Editeur: W. W. Norton & Company, 1974, ISBN 0393011054
* John Kafka : "Multiple Realities in Clinical Practice", Publisher: Yale University Press, 1989, ISBN 0300043503
*
Pierre Fédida: "Dictionary of Psychoanalysis", Publisher: French & European Pubns; 2nd edition 1988, Language: English, ISBN 0828822158
*Brenner, C. (1954).
An elementary textbook of psychoanalysis.*
John Steiner : "Psychic Retreats" (...) relative peace and protection from strain when meaningful contact with the analyst is experienced as(...), Publisher: Routledge; 1993, ISBN 0415099242
*Corey, G. (2001).
Theory and practice of counseling and psychotherapy. (6th ed.). Belmont, CA: Brooks/Cole Thompson Learning
*
Hanna Segal : "The Work of Hanna Segal: A Kleinian Approach to Clinical Practice (Classical Psychoanalysis and Its Applications) " Publisher: Jason Aronson, 1993), ISBN 0876684223
*Seymour Fisher,,
The Scientific Credibility of Freud's Theories and Therapy, Columbia University Press (October, 1985), trade paperback, ISBN 023106215X
*
Sabina Spielrein : "Destruction as cause of becoming", 1993, ASIN B0006RF20A
*
Robert Stoller : "Presentations of Gender" , Publisher: Yale University Press; edition 1992, ISBN 0300054742
*
Edith Jacobson : "
Depression; Comparative Studies of Normal, Neurotic, and Psychotic Conditions", Publisher: International Universities Press , 1976, ISBN 0823611957
*Firestone, R.W. (2002). "The death of psychoanalysis and depth therapy." [Electronic version].
Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, Practice, and Training, 39(3), 223-232.
*
Rene Spitz : "The First Year of Life: Psychoanalytic Study of Normal and Deviant Development of Object Relations", Publisher: International Universities Press, 2006, ISBN 0823680568
*
Otto Kernberg : "Severe Personality Disorders: Psychotherapeutic", Publisher: Yale University Press; edition 1993, ISBN 0300053495
*Kramer, Peter D.,
Listening to Prozac: A Psychiatrist Explores Antidepressant Drugs and the Remaking of the Self ISBN 0670841838.
*
Herbert A Rosenfeld: * "Impasse and Interpretation: Therapeutic and Anti-Therapeutic Factors in the Psycho-Analytic Treatment of Psychotic, Borderline, and Neurotic Patients", Publisher: Tavistock Publications, 1987, ISBN 0422610100
*Luhrmann, T.M.,
Of Two Minds: The Growing Disorder in American Psychiatry ISBN 0679421912.
*
André Green : "Psychoanalysis: A Paradigm For Clinical Thinking" Publisher: Free Association Books, 2005, ISBN 1853437735
*Thomson, C.L, Rudolph L.B., & Henderson, D. (2004).
Counseling children. (6th ed.). Belmont, CA: Brooks/Cole Thompson.
*
Jose Bleger "Symbiosis and Ambiguity: The Psychoanalysis of Very Early Development", Publisher: Free Association Books, 1990, ISBN 1853431346
Psychoanalytic Theory: An Introduction, by Anthony Elliott, an introduction that explains psychoanalytic theory with interpretations of major theorists [
2]
*
Harold F Searles : "Collected Papers on
Schizophrenia and Related Subjects" , Publisher: International Universities Press, 1966, ISBN 0823609804
*
Heinz Kohut : "Analysis of the Self: Systematic Approach to Treatment of Narcissistic Personality Disorders", Publisher: International Universities Press, 2000, ISBN 0823680029
The Psychoanalytic Movement: The Cunning of Unreason, by Ernest Gellner. A critical view of Freudian theory. ISBN 0810113708
*
Mitchell, S. & Black, M. (1995). Freud and Beyond: A History of Modern Psychoanalytic Thought*
Donald Meltzer "The Kleinian Development (New edition)", Publisher: Karnac Books; Reprint edition 1998, ISBN 1855751941
*
Donald Meltzer : "Dream-Life: A Re-Examination of the Psycho-Analytical Theory and Technique" Publisher: Karnac Books, 1983, ISBN 0902965174
*
Heinrich Racker : "
Transference and
Counter-Transference", Publisher: International Universities Press, 2001, ISBN 0823683230
*
Donald Winnicott : "Playing and Reality", Publisher: Routledge; edition 2005, ISBN 0415345464
Critiques of psychoanalysis
*Borch-Jacobsen, M (1996). Remembering Anna O: A century of mystification. London, Routledge. ISBN 0415917778
*Cioffi, F. (1998).
Freud and the Question of Pseudoscience. Open Court Publishing Company. ISBN 081269385X
*Erwin, Edward,
A Final Accounting: Philosophical and Empirical Issues in Freudian Psychology ISBN 0262050501
*Fisher S., Greenberg RP. (1977),
The Scientific Credibility of Freud's Theories and Therapy. New York: Basic Books, 1977.
*Fisher S, Greenberg RP. (1996),
Freud Scientifically Reappraised: Testing the Theories and Therapy. New York: John Wiley, 1996.
*Gellner, Ernest,
The Psychoanalytic Movement: The Cunning of Unreason. A critical view of Freudian theory. ISBN 0810113708
*Grünbaum, Adolf (1979), Is Freudian Psychoanalytic Theory Pseudo-Scientific by Karl Popper's Criterion of Demarcation?, "American Philosophical Quarterly", 16, Ap 79, s.131-141.
*Grünbaum, Adolf (1985)
The Foundations of Psychoanalysis: A Philosophical Critique ISBN 0520050177
*Janov, Arthur, "Grand Delusions." Chapter 8: Freud's theory as therapy: The talking cure that doesn't heal. [
3]
*Loftus, EF & Ketcham, K. (1994)
The Myth of Repressed Memory. NY: St. Martin's Press.
*Macmillan, Malcolm, and Frederick Crews,
Freud Evaluated: The Completed Arc ISBN 0262631717
*Morley S, Eccleston C, Williams A. (1999) Systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials of cognitive behaviour therapy and behaviour therapy for chronic pain in adults, excluding headache. Pain. 1999 Mar;80(1-2):1-13.
*Webster R. (1995). "Why Freud was wrong ?", Basic Books, Harper Collins, NY NY. ISBN 0465091288
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* [
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*
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Australian Psychoanalytical Society (component of IPA) *
Canadian Psychoanalytic Society*
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Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association online *
Lacan Dot Com *
London Centre for Psychotherapy *
Manhattan Institute for Psychoanalysis*
NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis*
National Psychological Association for Psychoanalysis- UK based
*
New York Freudian Society *
The New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute *
Psychoanalysis Downunder - online journal of APAS *
Psychoanalysis - Techniques and Practice - provides teachings on theory and practice of psychoanalysis, including online courses.
*
PSYCHOMEDIA The First Italian Portal on Psychiatry Psychology Psychoanalysis Psychotherapy*
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The Seattle Psychoanalytic Society and Institute*
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Gill, M. (1984). Psychoanalysis and psychotherapy: A revision *
Kernberg, O. (2000). Psychoanalysis, psychoanalytic psychotherapy and supportive psychotherapy: contemporary controversies *
Mitchell, Stephen A. (1984). Object relations theories and the developmental tilt *
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Blatt, S. & Shahar, G. (2004). Psychoanalysis: With whom, for what, and how? Comparisons with psychotherapy *
Brakel, L. (2005). The psychoanalytic assumption of the primary process: Extrapsychoanalytic evidence and findings *
Fonagy, P.(1997). Attachment, the development of the self, and its pathology in personality disorders *
Freedman, N, Lasky, R., & Hurvich, M. (2001), Transformation Cycles as Organizers of Psychoanalytic Process: The Method of Sequential Specification*
Freud, Sigmund (1920). Dream Psychology: Psychoanalysis for Beginners*
Masling, J.(1999). An Evaluation of Empirical Research Linked to Psychoanalytic Theory *
Shaver, P. & Mikulincer, M. (2002). Attachment-Related Psychodynamics. *
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