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Full Description
This book explores extreme experiences in psychoanalysis and examines how to work with and understand such experiences both theoretically and practically.
It invites readers into new, transformative quantum frontiers of psychoanalytic thought and clinical experience. Taking her profound work as the heart of the conversation, Eshel and a distinguished range of authors examine the essence of the great unknown in diverse realms of psychoanalysis—from massively traumatic states and enigmatic telepathic dreams to the sudden, shattering death of a patient. They focus on the decisive shift from classical psychoanalysis and its epistemological boundaries to the traumatic, the catastrophic, and the unknowable—charting an ontological-experiential, quantum frontier of analytic work. Inspired by Winnicott and Bion, yet reaching beyond them, these contributions open both mind and heart to a dimension of radical presence and deeply transformative forms of analytic oneness, making possible encounters with even the most seemingly unreachable patients.
This is essential reading for psychoanalysts and psychotherapists seeking to extend the reach of psychoanalytic treatment and to work with some of the most difficult clinical situations.
Contents
Part I: Reinventing psychoanalysis for the great traumatic unknown 1. Being Totally in the dark: On working analytically within the depths of the great unknown of psychic catastrophe 2. Into the wilderness with Ofra Eshel and her patient Clari 3. Fascinated and troubled in contemporary psychoanalysis: Ofra Eshel's extension of the Bion-Winnicott framework for working with severe traumatic states Part II: The enigma of telepathic dreams 4. Where are you, my beloved? On absence, loss, and the enigma of telepathic dreams 5. "To approach what is radically other": Ofra's Eshel's "Where are you, my beloved?" Part III: Reinventing psychanalysis for severe perversion 6. Calamities and secrets, the power of the fetish: Clinical case 7. Delving into the never-ending challenge of reinventing psychanalysis for severe perversion 8. Bearing the Unbearable—in reply



