»This space is so dreary - the kind of place you'd go to if you wanted to hang yourself.« Patient and therapist maneuvering between psychoanalysis, neurology and palliative care The paper is a reflection on the psychotherapeutic treatment of a patient viewed from the perspectives of psychoanalysis, neurology and palliative care. The author discusses the development of these three perspectives, showing how they complement and enrich, but also interfere with each other in the course of treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
The Journal for Individual Psychology plans to announce the topics for its upcoming issues and invites interested authors to submit articles. The topics for the upcoming issues are trauma, failure/negative therapy outcomes, societal topics as a "rescue" of psychoanalysis, and a conference issue for the annual conference of the DGIP 2022. The manuscripts will undergo an anonymous peer review. The journal has a print edition with the ISSN 0342-393X and an online edition with the ISSN 2196-8330. [Extracted from the article]
This short paper starts with a sketch of the current status of biopsychosocial medicine and of the relation between psychoanalysis and science. It claims that these two traditions and concepts in their current state can learn from each other in their shared aim of making subjective experience of patients, a central dimension of human illness and disease, a focal point of of diagnosis and therapy. The book "Mentalizing the body" by Ulrich Schultz-Venrath serves as an important example of this common learning process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
*OBJECT relations, *PSYCHOANALYSIS, *MENTAL illness treatment, *THEORY of mind
Abstract
A review of the relationship between mentalizing theory and psychoanalysis, examining the origins of mentalization-based treatment in traditional psychoanalysis, in particular its compatibility with object relations theory, and areas of divergence, such as the different emphasis upon and management of transference. More recent developments in psychoanalytical thinking and their relationship with MBT are also considered, in particular the emphasis on process in the here and now. The paper finishes with a recognition of the work that remains to be done in relocating and rethinking MBT in relation to psychoanalysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]