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El. knyga: Playing and Becoming in Psychoanalysis [Taylor & Francis e-book]

(Massachusetts Institute for Psychoanalysis, Brookline, USA)
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
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Building on Winnicott’s theory of play, this book defines the concept of play from the perspective of clinical practice, elaborating on its application to clinical problems.

Although Winnicott’s theory of play constitutes a radical understanding of the intersubjectivity of therapy, Cooper contends, there remains a need to explore the significance of play to the enactment of transference-countertransference. Among several ideas, this book considers how to help patients as they navigate debilitating internal object relations, supporting them to engage with "bad objects" in alternatively playful ways. In addition, throughout the book, Cooper develops an ethic of play that can support the analyst to find "ventilated spaces" of their own, whereby they can reflect on transference-countertransference. Rather than being hindered by the limits of the therapeutic setting, this book explores how possibilities for play can develop out of these very constraints, ultimately providing a fulsome exploration of the concept without eviscerating its magic.

With a broad theoretical base, and a wide definition of play, this book will appeal to psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists wanting to understand how play functions within and can transform their clinical practice.



Equally informed by existing psychoanalytic theories, such as those by Winnicott, Bion and Mitchell, and rich clinical material, this book defines the concept of play from the perspective of clinical practice to elaborate on its application to clinical problems.

 

Acknowledgments x
Credits List xi
Introduction 1(12)
1 Playing in the Darkness: Use of the Object and Use of the Subject
13(24)
2 Toward an Ethic of Play in Psychoanalysis
37(26)
3 The Limits of Intimacy and the Intimacy of Limits: Play and the Internal Bad Object
63(22)
4 The Paradox of Play in Mourning
85(21)
5 A Theory of the Setting: The Transformation of Unrepresented Experience and Play
106(23)
6 "I Want You to Be": Thinking about Winnicott's View of Interpretation in Ontological and Epistemological Psychoanalysis
129(21)
7 Donald Winnicott's Play and Stephen Mitchell's Developmental Tilt Hypothesis Reconsidered
150(24)
Index 174
Steven H. Cooper is a training and supervising analyst at the Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute. He is on the faculty at the New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy and the Austen Riggs Center. He is in private practice in New York.