1st Edition

Otto Kernberg A contemporary Introduction

    152 Pages
    by Routledge

    152 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this book, Frank Yeomans, Diana Diamond and Eve Caligor provide a systemic review of Otto Kernberg’s multiple contributions to psychoanalysis, psychiatry, psychology and our understanding of the mind and group behaviour.

     

    The book spans the full scope of Kernberg’s career, both highlighting the diversity of topics on which his writings have shed light and emphasising conceptual threads that link the different areas of his work. It accessibly follows the experiences that had an impact on the development of his thought and the increasingly strong impact his writing and thinking have had on psychoanalysis and related fields. The authors draw on their decades of working closely with Kernberg to offer a unique insight into his teaching and research, focusing on his work on borderline and narcissistic pathology and the fundamental conceptualisation of personality disorders.

     

    Including an overview of Kernberg’s critique and expansion of traditional psychoanalytic training, as well as his role in developing Transference-Focused Psychotherapy, this book is an invaluable guide to students, researchers and analysts in practice and training looking to integrate Kernberg’s ideas into their own clinical and theoretical work.

    1. A Brief Professional Biography  2. An Integrative Model of the Mind  3.The focus on psychological structure: borderline personality organization (BPO) as the common factor across all severe personality disorders  4. Expanding the Boundaries of the Analytic Method and Focusing on the Central Techniques of Psychoanalysis as the Core of Psychoanalytic Training and Treatments  5.Encouragement and Development of Research 6. Pathological Narcissism and Love Relations  7. Social and Political Perspectives on Narcissism and its Disorders

    Biography

    Frank Yeomans is Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the Weill Medical College of Cornell University, Director of Training at the Personality Disorders Institute of Weill-Cornell, Lecturer in Psychiatry at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research, and Director of the Personality Studies Institute in Manhattan, USA.

     

    Diana Diamond is Professor Emerita in the Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology at CUNY and Senior Fellow at the Personality Disorders Institute at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is also adjunct full professor in the NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, an honorary member of the American Psychoanalytic Association. Dr. Diamond has published extensively on personality disorders, attachment and narcissism.

     

    Eve Caligor is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the Columbia Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons and Director of the Psychotherapy Division at the Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research.  

    “Just like Otto Kernberg’s work itself, this wonderfully lucid overview of his many contributions to theory, research and practice is simultaneously integrative and wholly original.” 

    Mark Solms, Co-Chair of the International Neuropsychoanalysis Society, Research Chair of the International Psychoanalytical Association and Science Director of the American Psychoanalytic Association. Director of Neuropsychology at the Neuroscience Institute of The University of Cape Town

     

    “It might not be an exaggeration to refer to Otto Kernberg as a “living legend” in the worlds of psychoanalysis and psychiatry.  Setting out to chronicle his awesome career would be a daunting challenge to anyone, but Yeomans, Diamond, and Caligor have done just that, and they have done it beautifully.  As Kernberg’s collaborators, they know his work well.  With rare clarity, they walk us through the evolution of his thinking and his seminal contributions to our understanding of human behavior.”   

    John M Oldham MD, Distinguished Emeritus Professor, Baylor College of Medicine

     

    “This collection shows Otto Kernberg as the intellectual and clinical giant he was –the most important and deepest psychoanalytic thinker and innovator from North America but one deeply knowledgeable of psychoanalytic and psychiatric viewpoints across the globe. Kernberg became known for integrating diverse ideas and bringing psychoanalysis into psychiatry in a rigorous way. He did it from a profound grasp of the central tenets of clinical psychoanalysis: Freud’s discovery that patients suffer from unconscious ideas experienced with other persons that create conflicts of ambivalence with which they cannot cope. A “must-read” for every aspiring psychiatrist and psychoanalyst”  

    David Tuckett, Distinguished Fellow and Training Psychoanalyst, British Psychoanalytic Society, Emeritus Professor of Decision-Making at University College London (UCL) and lead author of Knowing What do Psychoanalysts Do and Doing What Psychoanalysts Know. 

     

    “Otto Kernberg has arguably contributed more to clinical theory, research, and practice than any other living psychoanalyst. In this invaluable volume, his closest colleagues convey his ideas with the same candid, curious, open-minded attitude that has pervaded Kernberg’s life and work. Although his own writing can be daunting to readers not well versed in psychoanalytic concepts, this lucid explication of Kernberg’s major contributions comes across as accessibly as a well-composed song. It should be read by anyone interested in personality, psychotherapy, psychopathology, sociopolitical and cultural processes, human hatred, and transcendent love – that is, by all of us who care about our world and the people in it.”

    Nancy McWilliams, PhD, ABPP, Visiting Professor Emerita, Rutgers Graduate School of Applied & Professional Psychology