Untangling: A Memoir of Psychoanalysis
Autor Joan K. Peters Cuvânt după de Kristi Walshen Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 feb 2025
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9798881802264
Pagini: 218
Dimensiuni: 158 x 232 x 4 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Pagini: 218
Dimensiuni: 158 x 232 x 4 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Part I: Why Would Anyone Do This?
Chapter 1: It Would Never Have Occurred to Me
Chapter 2: Beginning
Chapter 3: Him
Chapter 4: Lane Explains Me to Me
Chapter 5: Father Number Two: My Stepfather Dan
Chapter 6: The Mother Lode
Chapter 7: Schizoid
Chapter 8: The Shattering
Chapter 9: Men
Chapter 10: The Floodgates Open
Part II: Rapt: At the Peak of Transference
Chapter 11: Her Work and Mine
Chapter 12: Rupture and Repair
Chapter 13: Attachment Trouble
Chapter 14: The Anti-Force
Chapter 15: Transference 101
Chapter 16: The Thaw
Chapter 17: Zen, Psilocybin, and Psychoanalysis
Chapter 18: Advanced Transference
Chapter 19: Good Grief
Coda
Afterword by Dr. Kristi Walsh
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: It Would Never Have Occurred to Me
Chapter 2: Beginning
Chapter 3: Him
Chapter 4: Lane Explains Me to Me
Chapter 5: Father Number Two: My Stepfather Dan
Chapter 6: The Mother Lode
Chapter 7: Schizoid
Chapter 8: The Shattering
Chapter 9: Men
Chapter 10: The Floodgates Open
Part II: Rapt: At the Peak of Transference
Chapter 11: Her Work and Mine
Chapter 12: Rupture and Repair
Chapter 13: Attachment Trouble
Chapter 14: The Anti-Force
Chapter 15: Transference 101
Chapter 16: The Thaw
Chapter 17: Zen, Psilocybin, and Psychoanalysis
Chapter 18: Advanced Transference
Chapter 19: Good Grief
Coda
Afterword by Dr. Kristi Walsh
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Acknowledgments
Recenzii
A compelling memoir as well as an unusually in-depth therapeutic narrative that promises the possibility of redemption from early trauma at any age ... A stirring book that will be of interest to readers of memoirs about mental health or Jewish life, but also relevant to clinicians seeking a patient's perspective.
An intriguing look at the experience of psychoanalysis and a thoroughly examined life.
This is absolutely a book about transformation, but it's anything but precious. It's also an incredibly rare look at the process of psychoanalysis from the point of view of the patient (or the analysand), and not the doctor. Untangling offers a great modern self-portrait of a woman finding her footing after decades of private turmoil.
I intended to dip into Joan Peters's memoir for half an hour, but couldn't stop reading. Page after page my admiration for Peters's bravery and generous spirit grew. Pitch-perfect and unpretentious, Untangling is a powerful testimonial to confronting rather than running from the past, however painful.
In Untangling, Joan Peters courageously pulls back the curtain on the profound, often mysterious relationship between analyst and patient. This beautifully written memoir invites readers into the intimate space of psychoanalysis, where vulnerability and longing take center stage. With honesty and insight, Peters explores the delicate threads of human intimacy and the many paths to emotional truth. Untangling is a poignant reflection on love, dread, and the analytic process.
A triumph! Peters's memoir reads like a spellbinding novel-a testimony to what psychoanalysis can be. Her analyst's afterword is thoughtful, intelligent, and daring.
Joan Peters's uniquely brave and luminous Untangling explains why and how analysis works-or doesn't. Trauma cauterizes a child's ability to trust she can be loved. To 'untangle' her primal knots, a patient must recover that trust-and an analyst must be worthy of it. It requires an almost heroic effort of mutual attunement from both parties. It took Peters a lifetime, but she succeeded. This is a personal saga with universal wisdom to impart.
An intriguing look at the experience of psychoanalysis and a thoroughly examined life.
This is absolutely a book about transformation, but it's anything but precious. It's also an incredibly rare look at the process of psychoanalysis from the point of view of the patient (or the analysand), and not the doctor. Untangling offers a great modern self-portrait of a woman finding her footing after decades of private turmoil.
I intended to dip into Joan Peters's memoir for half an hour, but couldn't stop reading. Page after page my admiration for Peters's bravery and generous spirit grew. Pitch-perfect and unpretentious, Untangling is a powerful testimonial to confronting rather than running from the past, however painful.
In Untangling, Joan Peters courageously pulls back the curtain on the profound, often mysterious relationship between analyst and patient. This beautifully written memoir invites readers into the intimate space of psychoanalysis, where vulnerability and longing take center stage. With honesty and insight, Peters explores the delicate threads of human intimacy and the many paths to emotional truth. Untangling is a poignant reflection on love, dread, and the analytic process.
A triumph! Peters's memoir reads like a spellbinding novel-a testimony to what psychoanalysis can be. Her analyst's afterword is thoughtful, intelligent, and daring.
Joan Peters's uniquely brave and luminous Untangling explains why and how analysis works-or doesn't. Trauma cauterizes a child's ability to trust she can be loved. To 'untangle' her primal knots, a patient must recover that trust-and an analyst must be worthy of it. It requires an almost heroic effort of mutual attunement from both parties. It took Peters a lifetime, but she succeeded. This is a personal saga with universal wisdom to impart.