1st Edition
The Modernity of Sándor Ferenczi His historical and contemporary importance in psychoanalysis
Part One The Modernity of Sándor Ferenczi
Chapter One The Modernity of Sándor Ferenczi
Chapter Two A life inscribed in the crucible of the history of the psychoanalytic movement
Part Two: The Work
Chapter Three Presentation
Chapter Four "Introjection and transference" (1909a): the master stroke
Chapter Five "A little chanticleer" (1913a).
Chapter Six Thalassa. A Theory of Genitality. (1924a).
Chapter Seven "The technical innovations" (1918-1933)
- Active technique: those who are "absent" from themselves.
- The "elasticity"of the technique: new countertransference approaches
- Passionate states and new conceptions on traumatism
- Radicalisation and limits of the technique
Chapter Eight The concept of the "wise baby" (1924-1932)
Chapter Nine The Clinical Diary (January-October, 1932):
- The theoretical axis: trauma
- The technical axis: mutual analysis
- The personal axis: relations with Freud
Chapter Ten The heritage of Ferenczi’s advances at the theoretical level
Part Three: Choice of texts
"Transference and introjection" (1909a)
"On obscene words (contribution to the psychology of the latency period)" (1910a)
"Interchange of affect in dreams" (1916/1917)
"The further development of the "active therapy" in psycho-analysis (1920)
"The dream of the ‘wise’ baby" (1923a)
Thalassa, a Theory of Genitality (1924a)
"Contra-indications to the ‘active’ psycho-analytical technique" (1926a)
"The elasticity of psycho-analytic technique" (1928a)
"The principle of relaxation and neocatharsis" (1930a)
"Confusion of tongues between adults and the child" (1933a)
Afterword Robert Bartlett, Adrienne Harris, and Lauren Levine
Biography
Thierry Bokanowski is a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst. He is currently a training and supervising analyst at the Paris Psychoanalytical Society (SPP). He has published articles across a range of different journals including the International Journal of Psychoanalysis and has participated in numerous collective works on psychoanalysis in both French and English.
"Bokanowski’s book is an important contribution for it shows in a rigorous way how Ferenczi’s ideas are essential in our daily clinical work today. It is a poignant book, which explores the vivid dimension of love and hate between Freud and Ferenczi whose drama was to have been far in advance of his time. He underlined the distinctions between traumas and offered a metapsychological understanding of early ego-splitting, including the splitting between soul and body. As a psychosomatician, I would say that he should be seen as the Grandfather of modern post Freudian psychosomatics and especially the Paris School. Through a living and embodied style of writing, Bokanowski shows that it was their respective views of the countertransference more than anything else that separated the paths of these two giants of psychoanalysis."-Marilia Aisenstein, Training Analyst, Hellenic Psychoanalytical Society and Paris Psychoanalytical Society.






