The Claustro-Agoraphobic Dilemma in Psychoanalysis: Fear of Madness

This collection addresses the theory of claustro-agoraphobic anxieties and schizoid phenomena. It provides psychoanalytic case studies of the transference and counter-transference dynamic inherent in these agonizing disorders.

In The Claustro-Agoraphobic Dilemma in Psychoanalysis: Fear of Madness, Susan Finkelstein and Heinz Weiss gather both classic papers and new essays, presenting a timely assessment of claustro-agoraphobia as first developed by Henri Rey. This volume includes papers by Helene Deutsch, Bertram Lewin, Edoardo Weiss, Esther Bick, Donald Meltzer, Albert Mason, John Steiner, and Claudia Frank, as well as a chapter by Kristin White on working remotely with psychoanalytic patients during the Covid-19 pandemic. Applying a Freudian, Kleinian, and Bionian methodology, this collection argues for a long-term approach to psychoanalytic treatment in order to help claustro-agoraphobic patients work through the unconscious conflicts that interfere with their capacity to engage in a committed relationship.

This book is essential reading for psychoanalysts in practice and training and will appeal to academics and historians interested in the universality of spiritual and mythic motifs.

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The Claustro-Agoraphobic Dilemma in Psychoanalysis: Fear of Madness

This collection addresses the theory of claustro-agoraphobic anxieties and schizoid phenomena. It provides psychoanalytic case studies of the transference and counter-transference dynamic inherent in these agonizing disorders.

In The Claustro-Agoraphobic Dilemma in Psychoanalysis: Fear of Madness, Susan Finkelstein and Heinz Weiss gather both classic papers and new essays, presenting a timely assessment of claustro-agoraphobia as first developed by Henri Rey. This volume includes papers by Helene Deutsch, Bertram Lewin, Edoardo Weiss, Esther Bick, Donald Meltzer, Albert Mason, John Steiner, and Claudia Frank, as well as a chapter by Kristin White on working remotely with psychoanalytic patients during the Covid-19 pandemic. Applying a Freudian, Kleinian, and Bionian methodology, this collection argues for a long-term approach to psychoanalytic treatment in order to help claustro-agoraphobic patients work through the unconscious conflicts that interfere with their capacity to engage in a committed relationship.

This book is essential reading for psychoanalysts in practice and training and will appeal to academics and historians interested in the universality of spiritual and mythic motifs.

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The Claustro-Agoraphobic Dilemma in Psychoanalysis: Fear of Madness

The Claustro-Agoraphobic Dilemma in Psychoanalysis: Fear of Madness

The Claustro-Agoraphobic Dilemma in Psychoanalysis: Fear of Madness

The Claustro-Agoraphobic Dilemma in Psychoanalysis: Fear of Madness

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Overview

This collection addresses the theory of claustro-agoraphobic anxieties and schizoid phenomena. It provides psychoanalytic case studies of the transference and counter-transference dynamic inherent in these agonizing disorders.

In The Claustro-Agoraphobic Dilemma in Psychoanalysis: Fear of Madness, Susan Finkelstein and Heinz Weiss gather both classic papers and new essays, presenting a timely assessment of claustro-agoraphobia as first developed by Henri Rey. This volume includes papers by Helene Deutsch, Bertram Lewin, Edoardo Weiss, Esther Bick, Donald Meltzer, Albert Mason, John Steiner, and Claudia Frank, as well as a chapter by Kristin White on working remotely with psychoanalytic patients during the Covid-19 pandemic. Applying a Freudian, Kleinian, and Bionian methodology, this collection argues for a long-term approach to psychoanalytic treatment in order to help claustro-agoraphobic patients work through the unconscious conflicts that interfere with their capacity to engage in a committed relationship.

This book is essential reading for psychoanalysts in practice and training and will appeal to academics and historians interested in the universality of spiritual and mythic motifs.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781032060149
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 11/08/2022
Pages: 210
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

About the Author

Susan Finkelstein is Faculty Member and Training and Supervising Analyst at the Contemporary Freudian Society and the Institute for Psychoanalytic Training and Research. She is Director of Understanding Primitive Mental States and an associate board member of the International Journal of Psychoanalysis. She practices psychoanalysis, supervision, and couples therapy in New York City.

Heinz Weiss, MD, is Head of the Department of Psychosomatic Medicine at the Robert-Bosch-Clinic, Stuttgart, Germany, Head of the Medical Department, and Member of the Directorate of the Sigmund Freud-Institute, Frankfurt, Germany. He teaches at the University of Tübingen and chairs the Education Section of the International Journal of Psychoanalysis.

Table of Contents

Introduction  Foreword  1. The Genesis of Agoraphobia  2. Claustrophobia  3. Agoraphobia and its Relation to Hysterical Attacks and to Traumas  4. Anxieties Underlying Phobia of Sexual Intercourse in a Woman  5. The Relation of Anal Masturbation to Projective Identification  6. The Suffocating Super-Ego: Psychotic Break and Claustrophobia  7. The Schizoid Mode of Being and the Space-Time Continuum (Before Metaphor)  8. A Theory of Psychic Retreats  9. Monstrous Phantasies and Monstrous Gods: Claustro-Agoraphobic Anxiety in Hesiod and Klein  10. Claustro-Agoraphobia - The Impact of Concrete Thinking on the Analyst's Internal Space  11. Intimacy and Loss of Orientation  12. Claustro-Agoraphobia in times of Covid-19: on the Problem of Making Analytic Contact when Using the Telephone and Internet for Analysis During the Coronavirus Pandemic  13. Conclusion
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