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1.
Psychoanal Q ; 92(4): 687-712, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38095859

RESUMO

I use the clinical example of a traumatized adolescent to talk about how a transference experience creates the frame where the analytic work occurs. Out of the external boundaries of the relationships with an object, the internal frame, the womb of transformation processes, is created. The analyst's capacity to wait is essential for the transformation that creates and shapes the transference experience, which, like playing, becomes the matrix of the frame where it happens as it happens. As the traumatic experiences find their place in the transference and begin to be integrated, the adolescent becomes more present and real in the session.


Assuntos
Interpretação Psicanalítica , Terapia Psicanalítica , Feminino , Adolescente , Humanos , Transferência Psicológica , Fases de Leitura , Útero
2.
Psychoanal Q ; 84(2): 441-61, 2015 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25876542

RESUMO

The author introduces Euripides's Medea as a metaphor of the psyche's attempt to express and symbolize preverbal, unrepresented experiences and wounds visited upon it before there was any word for trauma. He suggests that Medea, the wild foreigner whose murderous magic is unleashed when the facilitating environment betrays her, could be thought of psychoanalytically as the deepest uncharted realms of primitive, traumatized existence yearning to find a way to represent itself on the stage of language and reality. Euripides can help us understand this deep realm of the psyche, with which psychoanalysis also grapples; he presents the realization of an object that traumatically fails to contain preverbal elements and transform them.


Assuntos
Drama , Desenvolvimento da Linguagem , Metáfora , Interpretação Psicanalítica , Trauma Psicológico , Humanos
3.
Int J Psychoanal ; 92(1): 75-96, 2011 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21323879

RESUMO

The authors examine the concepts of repression and splitting and their interplay during the psychoanalytic process. Initially, repression was introduced by the clinical phenomenon of resistance, leading to the formulation of the association between intrapsychic conflicts and neurotic symptoms. Later, repression was linked to normal development and to personality organization. Splitting, on the other hand, has been defined in quite diverse ways. The two main definitions are of splitting within the ego, and splitting of representations of the self, and of internal and external objects. Repression and splitting are compared developmentally, dynamically, and with respect to their relationship to psychic functioning and energic conditions. Clinical material is presented from the analysis of a patient who presented with borderline personality organization and narcissistic features. During the initial phase of analysis, splitting associated with projection, projective identification and idealization were the main defence mechanisms. As the analysis progressed and the themes of omnipotence and mourning were explored with the simultaneous working through of drive derivatives expressed in the transference, repression gained ground over the more primitive defence mechanisms. The evolution of the case showed a gradual shift from splitting to repression and the association of repression with a more advanced psychic organization. This development reflected the dynamic movement from borderline to hysterical organization in psychoanalytic nosology.


Assuntos
Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/terapia , Teoria Psicanalítica , Terapia Psicanalítica/métodos , Repressão Psicológica , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/psicologia , Humanos , Transferência Psicológica
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