'This is not psychoanalysis': on the stony way of the Danish Psychoanalytical Society.

Int J Psychoanal

Københavnsvej 51B, DK-3400 Hillerød, Denmark.

Published: October 2004

When Freud founded the International Psychoanalytical Association (IPA), he wanted a network of local groups responsible for psychoanalytic training. The groups would function as 'headquarters whose business it would be to declare: "All this nonsense is nothing to do with analysis; this is not psychoanalysis".' Today, with psychoanalytic pluralism, Tuckett (in press) has asked 'Does anything go?' He has pointed out that the psychoanalytic community has been increasingly willing to accept within its ranks apparently very varied approaches to theory and practice, and that this increasing diversity has many negative consequences for psychoanalytic institutions and especially for training schemas. The aim of this paper is to give an example of psychoanalysis that 'did not go', and how that led to a shaky start for the new Danish Psychoanalytical Society, with confusing boundary relations between psychoanalysis and psychotherapy and no training institute. Beginning with the written psychoanalytical contribution of the three founders of the Danish Society, the paper will try to identify factors that contributed to the 'shaky start'. The paper will also examine how stones were removed from the path, thus paving the way for the members of the Society to discover 'competent psychoanalysis'.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1516/0020757042259566DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

danish psychoanalytical
8
psychoanalytical society
8
paper will
8
'this psychoanalysis'
4
psychoanalysis' stony
4
stony danish
4
psychoanalytical
4
society
4
society freud
4
freud founded
4

Similar Publications

Psychoanalytic training has been an object of controversy for many years. Arguments have been intense about the details, sometimes called "requirements", and particularly over whether or not training institutes should have routine external validation. We describe these arguments and present preliminary conclusions about the core challenges psychoanalytic trainings face using a unique set of detailed observations collected during structured "conversations" inside nine European institutes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mentalization is a developmental achievement defined as the capacity to understand behavior in terms of mental states. This study investigated mentalization in psychoanalytic psychotherapy (PPT) and cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) through a secondary data analysis of findings from a randomized controlled trial for bulimia nervosa. It was hypothesized that mentalization would predict alliance and outcome in both treatments, whereas increase in mentalization was only expected after PPT.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Letter from Stockholm.

Int J Psychoanal

April 2015

Haga Kyrkogatan 26, 411 23, Göteborg, Sweden.

Some of the ideas of Sigmund Freud were preceded in a literary form by the Swedish writer August Strindberg in the late 19th century. Psychoanalysis itself was introduced in Sweden about a decade into the 20th century by two rivalling pioneers, the doctors Emanuel af Geijerstam and Poul Bjerre. After a slow start, the Danish-Norwegian Psychoanalytical Society and the Finnish-Swedish Psychoanalytical Society were formed in 1934 in Stockholm.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Is there a common pathway to developing ASD and PTSD symptoms?

J Anxiety Disord

December 2014

School of Psychology and Psychology Research Institute, University of Ulster, Northern Ireland, UK.

Numerous studies have identified risk factors for acute and long-term posttraumatic stress symptoms following traumatic exposure. However, little is known about whether there are common pathways to the development of acute stress disorder (ASD) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Research suggests that a common path to ASD and PTSD may lie in peritraumatic responses and cognitions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!