1st Edition

Psychotherapeutic Treatment of Psychosis A Case of Catatonia and Discussion

Edited By Bennett E. Roth Copyright 2024

    This book explores the psychoanalytic treatment of a patient with psychosis from a range of different psychotherapeutic perspectives.

    The psychotherapeutic treatment of psychotic individuals is both rare and controversial with a limitation in availability of clinical material. As psychoanalytically oriented therapy is private, it is almost impossible to “witness” the actual human interaction of therapeutic process. While catatonia is a rare disorder, there are many attempts to hypothesize a theoretical psychic structure for the range of disorders called psychotic. Therapists rarely report “successful” outcomes of long and unusual treatments. In the book, a fragment of the treatment of a catatonic adolescent is reconstructed as an endeavor in representing that which is not clinically representable. Following the case report, which also reveals part of the history of the therapist, prominent analytic clinicians of different theoretical orientations share their understanding and comment on the material revealed.

    With a fresh perspective on psychoanalytic treatment of psychosis, this book is essential reading for psychoanalysts, psychotherapists, and clinicians involved in the treatment of psychosis.

    Introduction
    Bennett E. Roth

    1. Early case of therapy with a catatonic boy
    Bennett E. Roth

    2. Interview with the therapist
    Bennett E. Roth

    3. Witnessing the patient with psychosis
    Eric R. Marcus

    4. Comment on Dr. Bennett E. Roth’s experiences with a psychotic young man dominated by an internal pathological organization.
    Paul Williams

    5. Discussion of Dr. Bennett E. Roth’s case of a catatonic boy
    Annie Reiner

    6. Comment on Dr. Bennett E. Roth’s experiences with a catatonic psychotic boy: technical challenges of working with the psychotic and the nonpsychotic parts
    Karyn Todes

    7. Gone
    Paul Williams

    8. Working in the dark and from the heart
    Anthony Bass

    9. On trust as a necessary precondition to therapeutic success
    Priscilla F. Kauff

    Discussion
    Bennett E. Roth

    Biography

    Bennett Roth received a Ph.D. degree from New York University then trained in both psychoanalysis and group therapy. He has contributed to journals in both fields with particular interest in difficult patients. Following consulting work after 9/11, he researched group violence that resulted in A Group Analytic Approach to Mass Violence.