268 Pages 9 Color Illustrations
by Routledge

268 Pages 9 Color Illustrations
by Routledge

268 Pages 9 Color Illustrations
by Routledge

Paths of Symbolization explores philosophical and psychoanalytic questions about the concept of symbolization. Alain Gibeault connects symbolization with concepts like playing, sublimation and creation. With reference to Freud’s metapsychology and the French context specifically, Gibeault explores the significance of symbolization in analytic work. This book studies the theoretical questions... Read more

Series Editor’s Foreword
Silvia Flechner

Foreword: Symbolization as Process Interpretation,Construction, and Setting
Howard B. Levine

Introduction

Chapter 1

Conversion hysteria: the discovery of symbolization

Chapter 2

Dream symbolism

Chapter 3

The symbolism of money and psychoanalytic treatment

Chapter 4

Symbolization, projection, and projective identification

Chapter 5

Symbolization in analysis

Chapter 6

The interplay between symbolization, representation, and sublimation

Chapter 7

The birth of symbolization: prehistoric art

Conclusion

Biography

Alain Gibeault is a philosopher, psychologist, and psychoanalyst. He is a training and full member of the Paris Psychoanalytical Society and former director of the E. & J. Kestemberg Center for Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy. He served as President of the European Psychoanalytical Federation and General Secretary of the International Psychoanalytical Association. He is also an Honorary Professor at Lomonossov Moscow State University and co-editor-in-chief of the journal Psychanalyse et psychose (E. & J. Kestemberg Center).

“In this creative book, the author combines a rich and nuanced reflection on mental processes of symbolization with a compelling insight into an innovative psychoanalytic practice, especially for people who suffer from symbolization disorders such as autism, hypochondria, or psychoses. It is fascinating to see how rigorously the theoretical foundation, with its discussion of the relationship between symbolizations in areas as diverse as conversion symptoms, dreams, money, and prehistoric art and, finally, in the psychoanalytic process, as well as the conceptual clarification of the relationships between symbolization, representation and sublimation, fits into a vivid synthesis of play and language in the psychoanalytic process and also in the symbolizing setting of psychoanalytic psychodrama. This book invites the reader to take a big step into often uncharted territory, and she or he is rewarded by participating in a profound conceptual reflection and deeply touching clinical case presentations.”- Heribert Blass, Member of the German Psychoanalytical Association; President of the International Psychoanalytical Association; Past President of the European Psychoanalytical Federation

 

In Paths of Symbolization Alain Gibeault provides a real treat for the psychoanalytic community.  In what has the makings of a classic treatise, he, inter alia, comprehensively reviews the development of core psychoanalyic concepts and phenomena from Freud through to the evolving major French and English schools. Gibeault links these with the increasing sophisticated understandings of symbolization and its psychopathologies as understood in psychoanalysis (compared with other disciplines). How does psychoanalysis promote symbolisation? Answers are provided with fascinating clinical examples, including persons with autistic, psychosomatic, borderline and various psychotic phenomena. Also illustrated are modifications of frame such as psychoanalytic psychodrama for specific indications.” - Brian Martindale, Retired Member of the British Psychoanalytical Society; Honorary President European Federation of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy (EFPP); Honorary Life Member International Society for Psychological and Social Approaches to Psychosis (ISPS)

 

“What about symbolization for psychoanalysts? Alain Gibeault addresses this question in a particularly in-depth and convincing manner. Each chapter corresponds to a division of this symbolic function and highlights its specificity. This approach to the symbol in psychoanalysis, the symballo, defines it as a link between two parts, one completing the other, as well as their unity—rendered unconscious through evolution—thus requiring interpretation, the privileged psychoanalytic instrument of S. Freud. The order of the chapters follows the accidents of symbolization as revealed by Freud’s psychopathological discoveries over time. The author revisits key concepts such as projection and projective identification in his discussion of psychosis, which he considers particularly illuminating in understanding psychic functioning. He argues that psychosis not only enriches this essential process of symbolization but also contributes to the emergence and comprehension of thought activity. Let us embark on the journey through this remarkable book.” - Béatrice Ithier, Member of the Paris Psychoanalytical Society and the Italian Psychoanalytic Society; Clinical Psychologist; Recognized Child, Adolescent, and Adult Psychoanalyst by the IPA; Training Analyst at the Institute of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy of Warsaw

 

It is hardly surprising that the question of symbolization has been particularly studied in French psychoanalysis, given the importance that its various currents place on language and, more broadly, on the anthropological specificities of the emergence of the human species. As a psychoanalyst with a background in philosophy, Alain Gibeault is ideally positioned to explore this issue by encompassing its various aspects, taking into account not only the processes of symbolization unique to humans but also the specificity of symbolization in Freud’s thought and in metapsychology. His extensive experience in the psychoanalytic treatment of non-neurotic organizations (such as psychotic and borderline states) greatly contributes to the understanding and practical application of the concept of symbolization.” - Vassilis Kapsambelis is a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, a member of the Paris Psychoanalytical Society, and the director of the Revue française de Psychanalyse.