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Book Reviews
Authors:Donna F. Tarver  Margaret M. Tulley  Harriet S. Plaskow
Affiliation:1. Psychotherapist in Private Practice Dallas, TX;2. Infant Mental Health Clinician Riverdale Mental Health Association and Private Practice Bronx, NY;3. Psychiatric Social Worker The Program for Children with AIDS The New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center
Abstract:Abstract

There are many brief, demanding, aborted cases that no one ever writes about. The typical psychoanalyst or psychoanalytic psychotherapist, however, has many outpatient cases that are shortlived, intense encounters with very disturbed patients. Rather than ignore these encounters as non-analytic or non-instructive, I think these cases add to our knowledge about the mind and its functions. In addition, it is unrealistic to think we can always help a very anxious and disturbed person to enter the treatment process with immediate success. It is more instructive to apply the analytic method and offer the patient what we can and have both analyst and patient learn as much as they can in the time they are able to stay together. Using case material, I show the Kleinian approach to working analytically with these difficult patients. Whether focusing on transference or extra-transference material, the analyst interprets the patient's internal phantasies and anxieties regarding the self and the self's important objects. This analytic stance tends to relieve the immediate anxiety and set the stage for potential self-reflection and the start of basic working-through processes.
Keywords:Internalized object representations  transference  paranoid-schizoid position
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