Issue 1
15 articlesCritical Clinical Moments in the Treatment Process with CommentariesIntroduction
Articles
- pp. 6-12
The Analyst’s Affect: The Way Back from Gridlock, Blindspots, and Loss of Vitality
Heather Ferguson - pp. 13-16
Lily’s Lament
Doris Brothers - pp. 17-22
Grief and Rejuvenation: A Mutual Journey
Maria L. Slowiaczek - pp. 23-28
The Analyst’s Affect in the Therapeutic Relationship
Judy Guss Teicholz - pp. 29-36
Words, Images, Dreams and Metaphors: The Analyst’s Embodied Imagination in the Service of Therapeutic Engagement
Elizabeth Seward - pp. 37-43
Between Classic Interpretation and Analytic Presence: Discussion of Elizabeth Seward’s Paper
Gabriela Mann - pp. 44-50
Relatedness, the Ethic of Tenderness, and the Psychoanalytic Cultural Divide
Joye Weisel-Barth - pp. 51-57
Psychoanalysis and Its Own “Confusion of Tongues”: Toward a Language of Inclusion
Hilary Maddux - pp. 58-64
Brian, Psychosis, and the Language of Love
Suzi Naiburg - pp. 65-72
Dolph and Gus: The War of the World: Safety in the Analytic Play Space and the Intrusions of Terror
James Herzog - pp. 73-78
Discussion of Dr. James Herzog’s Case: Dolph and Gus
Richard A. Geist - pp. 79-84
Sex and Subjectivity, and Self Psychology: Discussion of Herzog’s Dolph and Gus
Janna Horowitz Sandmeyer - pp. 85-94
A Conversation With the Boston Change Group on Enactments
Daniel Goldin - pp. 95-98
Discussion of Daniel Goldin’s Paper on Enactments
Joseph Lichtenberg
Issue 2
8 articlesHeinz Kohut Memorial Lecture
- pp. 119-131
Integrating Contemplative Practice and Embodied Awareness in the Treatment of Dissociative Anxiety
Shoshana Ringel - pp. 132-148
Yearning for Godot: Repetition and Vulnerability in Psychoanalysis
Darren Haber - pp. 149-159
From Repetition to Renewal: Fear and Longing in the Psychoanalytic Relationship
George Hagman & Susanne Weil - pp. 160-170
Self Psychology and the Concept of the Nuclear Self: A Dynamic Systems Perspective
Jeffrey L. Trop & Gabriel Trop - pp. 171-185
Sexualization in the Work of Heinz Kohut
Charles B. Strozier, David Strug, Konstantine Pinteris & Kathleen Kelley
Book Reviews
- pp. 186-192
History and Memory as Ethical Practice: A Review Essay of Not in My Family: German Memory and Responsibility After the Holocaust by Roger Frie
Lynne Jacobs - pp. 193-202
Reviews of Psychoanalytic Collisions and Holding and Psychoanalysis: A Relational Perspective by Joyce Slochower
Rochelle Reno
Issue 3
8 articlesOriginal Articles
- pp. 205-219
MEETING OUR PATIENTS HALFWAY: TOWARD AN ETHIC OF CARE IN PSYCHOANALYSIS
Hilary Maddux - pp. 220-228
THE ETHICS OF LISTENING IN PSYCHOANALYTIC CONVERSATIONS
Elizabeth A. Corpt - pp. 246-258
THE RESTORATION OF THE SELFOBJECT
Barry Magid & ESTELLE SHANE - pp. 259-271
SILENCING OF SADNESS: FINDING THE STORY IN THE BODY
LORRAINE B. CATES - pp. 272-287
A THERAPIST’S FALLIBILISM AND THE HERMENEUTICS OF TRUST
JOSHUA R. BURG - pp. 288-298
Bounded Openness: A Secure Base for Expansion and Creativity
Denise R. Davis - pp. 299-306
STEVEN STERN: NEEDED RELATIONSHIPS AND PSYCHOANALYTIC HEALING
Estelle Shane
Issue 4
9 articlesPsychoanalysis Confronts the PoliticalIntroduction
Original Article
- pp. 311-334
The Earthquake That Is the Hoffman Report on Torture: Toward a Re-Moralization of Psychology
Philip Cushman - pp. 389-397
Caught in the Crossfire: Political Intersections, Collisions, and Confrontations
Karen E. Starr - pp. 398-408
Hidden Injuries: Stories of Social Class, Politics, and the Face of the Other
Lane Gerber
Discussion
- pp. 335-341
You Have The Right To Remain Silent, Or Do You Have The Obligation To Speak?
Donna M. Orange - pp. 342-349
Discussion of Philip Cushman’s “Hoffman Report as Earthquake”: Hopes and Challenges on the Path to Psychology’s Re-Moralization
Steven Botticelli - pp. 350-367
It is Time for Psychologists to Face the Truth: Commentary on Philip Cushman’s “The Earthquake That is the Hoffman Report on Torture”
Stephen Soldz - pp. 368-377
Torture and the Problem of the Bystander: Commentary on Philip Cushman’s “The Earthquake That Is the Hoffman Report on Torture: Toward a Re-Moralization of Psychology”
Nancy Caro Hollander - pp. 378-388
Response to Orange, Botticelli, Soldz, and Hollander
PHILIP CUSHMAN