1st Edition

Contacting the Autistic Child Five successful early psychoanalytic interventions

    200 Pages 6 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    200 Pages 6 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Amid long-standing controversy on their causes, which most regard as neurological, and despite their increasing social impact, there has been scant progress in the therapy of the autistic spectrum disorders. Currently fashionable attempts at treatment through behavioural-cognitive focal approaches do not seek resolution, only re-education and rehabilitation. Contacting the Autistic Child explores the clinical process in the early psychoanalytic treatment of autistic children. Organised around five detailed clinical case studies, and drawing on the ideas of major clinicians in child analysis such as Tustin, Winnicott and Alvarez, this book sets out a clear programme for working with and understanding autistic children in a psychoanalytic setting, with a particular focus on issues of clinical technique but also conceptual matters. 

    Working on the notion that autistic disorders come to be – as Winnicott and Tustin saw it – from an early rupture of the affective communication between baby and mother, this book aims at reinstating such communication in the child-analyst interaction. By way of detailed description of what goes on in the analytic link, the authors strive to make the reader share in what goes on in the clinical setting, evincing how, though at times excruciatingly hard on the therapist, resolution is attainable. Once the "primal dialogue" – to use René Spitz’s terms – is reinstated in a stable way in session, it flows by itself into the family ambience. The clinical accounts of this book make the argument that psychoanalysis, carried along Tustin’s technical lines, and subject to the proviso that treatment starts early, preferably in the first three years of life, is the treatment of choice for autistic spectrum disorders. The strong methodological narrative is important and notable in light of the doubts, criticism and uncertainty that have surrounded the psychoanalytic treatment of autism.  

    This novel, highly detailed narrative of five successful early treatments aims to help dispel the pessimism pervading the field and help to redress the lives of many more children. Contacting the Autistic Child will appeal to psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists endeavouring to obtain results in a major area lacking resolutive approaches.

    Preface by Elisabeth L. da Rocha Barros and Elias M. de Rocha Barros

    Foreword

    Introduction: The expanding frontiers of autistic spectrum disorders

    Ch. 1: Autism: a historical approach

    Ch. 2: Contacting a 19-month-old mute autistic girl: Lila

    Ch. 3: Treating encapsulated autism soon after trauma: Axel

    Ch. 4: From mimesis to agency: clinical steps in Sophia’s work of psychic two-ness.

    Ch. 5: Autistic mimesis in the Age of Media: Juan, a screen-bred animal-child

    Ch. 6: Clinical notes on a case of transvestism in an autistic child: Jaime

    Ch. 7: Conceptual remarks on early mind

    Ch. 8: A roaming view of the Autistoid Age

    Addendum 1: Bion’s theory of thinking and autistic-mimetic dynamics: a dialogue with Antonino Ferro

    Addendum 2: On Tustin’s Revised Edition, a response to Angela Joyce, and an excursus on Ogden's autistic-contiguous position

    Biography

    Luisa C. Busch de Ahumada is a full member of the Buenos Aires Psychoanalytic Association and an IPA-certified child psychoanalyst. 

    Jorge L. Ahumada is a training analyst at the Argentine Psychoanalytic Association and a Distinguished Fellow of the British Psychoanalytical Society. He was editor for Latin America of the International Journal of Psychoanalysis from 1993 to 1998, and received the Mary S. Sigourney Award in New York in 1996. He was "Meet the Analyst" Speaker at the International Psychoanalytic Association Prague Congress, 2013.