COUNTERTRANSFERENCE DREAMING: LIFE IN THE INTERSUBJECTIVE THIRD |
| |
Authors: | Virginia Rachmani |
| |
Affiliation: | 1.New York,USA |
| |
Abstract: | In this paper the author asks, “How long is the life of an intersubjective field?” She proposes that it is possible for the field to remain active and instructive even after formal sessions have ended: This occurs in her case of Carla, a young woman who terminates prematurely. Carla enters treatment in a downward spiral of severe trauma symptoms that began subsequent to her rape, a decade earlier. Although Carla’s symptoms diminish and the analysis continues to be productive, it suddenly ends in an impasse, leaving the analyst perplexed and feeling professionally insufficient. Months later, she has three dreams pertaining to Carla and her rape. Largely employing Jessica Benjamin’s recognition theory and her representation of the intersubjective third, as well as contemporary Bionian thinking, the paper depicts how countertransference dreaming is one example of how the intersubjective field can carry on the psychoanalytic function—even outside of formal treatment. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|