Introduction - Hope and Limits in Psychoanalysis.Part I: Personal/Professional Struggles. Therapeutic Illusions. Negotiating a Personal Idiom.Creating Inner Space: The Psychoanalytic Writer.The Analyst’s Secret Delinquencies. Part II: Collisions in the Analytic Encounter.Existential Crises in the Consulting Room. Emotional Collisions.Theoretical Collisions in an Analytic Enclave. Asymmetrical and Colliding Idealizations. Mutual Idealizations and the Disavowed.The Ideal and the Actual.
Biography
Joyce Slochower is Professor Emerita at Hunter College and Graduate Center, the City University of New York. She is on the Faculty of the New York University Postdoctoral Program, the Steven Mitchell Center, the National Training Program of the National Institute for the Psychotherapies, the Philadelphia Center for Relational Studies, and the Psychoanalytic Institute of Northern California in San Francisco. She is the author of Holding and Psychoanalysis (Routledge, 2014) and over sixty papers. She is in private practice in New York City.
"In recommending the first edition of Psychoanalytic Collisions, I wrote that it was "a wise book, a mature book, a book that every psychoanalyst and psychodynamic psychotherapist will profit from reading." That remains true. But now Slochower has added updated clinical material and two new chapters, one a meditation on challenges that led the author to rethink her approach to trauma work, the other a fascinating examination of the role of idealizations, both the analyst’s and patient’s, on the treatments by Winnicott of Khan and Guntrip. In some ways, you are lucky if you didn’t read the first edition of this fine book—because this edition is even better." – Donnel Stern, PhD
"Joyce Slochower's Psychoanalytic Collisions is the rare book that speaks to practitioners across theoretical orientations, levels of experience, and personal sensibilities. This revised edition offers even more humanity and depth than its predecessor; the descriptions of patients and therapeutic collaborations exemplify the emotional honesty for which its author is well known. Seasoned therapists should read it for its nuanced exploration of their world. Beginners should read it for its orienting wisdom - and then read it again in ten years." – Nancy McWilliams, PhD, ABPP, Rutgers Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, USA






