1st Edition

The Collapse of the Self and Its Therapeutic Restoration

By Rochelle G. K. Kainer Copyright 1999
    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    The Collapse of the Self and Its Therapeutic Restoration is a rich and clinically detailed account of the therapeutic restoration of the self, and speaks to the healing process for analysts themselves that follows from Rochelle Kainer's sensitive integration of heretofore dissociated realms of psychoanalytic theory.  In describing how the reworking of pathological internal object relationships occurs in conjunction with the transformation of selfobject failures, Kainer brings new insight to bear on the healing of the self at the same time as she contributes to healing the historic split in psychoanalysis between Kleinian theory and self psychology.

    Extensive case illustrations, refracted through the lens of her uniquely integrative perspective, bring refreshing clarity to elusive theoretical concepts. Of special note is Kainer's distinction between normal and pathological identifications. Equally valuable is her introduction of the term "imaginative empathy" to characterize the kind of attunement that is integral to analytic healing; her nuanced description of the relation between imaginative empathy and projective identification bridges the worlds of Kleinian theory and self psychology in an original and compelling way. She ends by spelling out how her theoretical viewpoint leads to a more comprehensive understanding of various clinical phenomena.

    The Collapse of the Self and Its Therapeutic Restoration, is a sophisticated yet accessible work, gracefully written, that elaborates a relational theory of thinking, of creativity, of identification, and of the formation and healing of psychic structure. Kainer's ability to bring the often dissonant voices of different psychoanalytic schools into theoretical harmony as she develops her viewpoint conveys both the breadth of intellectual engagement with colleagues and the depth of clinical engagement with patients that inform her project from beginning to end.

    Foreword - James Grotstein
    Preface
    I. Creating the Self
    1. Found Objects: On the Nature of Identification
    2. Falling in Love with a Work of Art: Identifications in the Creation of the Ideal Self
    3. Sadomasochistic Identifications: The Formation of the Pathological Part of the Self
    II. The Collapse of the Self
    4. Narcissistic Injury and its Relation to Paranoid/Schizoid Collapse
    5. Compulsive Eating: Autistic Self-Soothing in a Neurotic Structure
    6. Hidden Spaces: Psychotic Residues in a Neurotic Structure
    7. From "Hysteroid Dysphoria" to "Posttraumatic Stress Disorder": A Case for Psychoanalysis in the Era of Neurobiology
    8. The Role of Projective Identification in Imaginative Empathy
    9. Psychic Catastrophe and the Premature Birth of the Self: Implications for Treatment 
    10.  - Lifting the Shadow of the Object: Reworking Pathological Internal Object-Relationships and Transforming Selfobject Failures

    Biography

    Kainer, Rochelle G. K.

    "In the best tradition of the psychoanalytic pioneers, Rochelle Kainer takes us on a journey into the interior. Supported by her own extensive clinical experience, her carefully chosen examples from art and literature, and her deft use of classical and contemporary theories, Kainer reveals previously hidden features of the psychic terrain. She is a boldly original guide who helps the reader explore the vicissitudes of identifications and the roles of good and bad objects in the formation of the self. Of particular interest to clinicians attempting to alleviate human suffering are Kainer's exploration of developmental processes gone awry and her illumination of the therapeutic action of the clinical encounter leading to the restoration of the self."

    - James W. Barron, Ph.D., Editor, Self Analysis: Critical Inquiries, Personal Vision (Analytic Press, 1993)

    "Rochelle Kainer is on the very short list of psychoanalytic thinkers who dare to speak of self psychology and neo-Kleinian theory in the same breath.  In this ambitious and courageous book, she deftly marries concepts from these two seemingly incompatible schools, producing some illuminating conceptual offspring in the process."

    - Susan H. Sands, Ph.D., Psychoanalytic Institute of Northern California

    "Owing to its integration of self-psychology and object relations theory, this book will be of interest to practitioners of both approaches as well as those who are interested in using both approaches within a relational perspective.  A very rich, imaginative, and sound work."

    - Michael Eigen, Ph.D., National Psychological Association for Psychoanalysis