Issue 1
12 articles- pp. 1-14
Hidden in Plain Sight: Thoughts on Imagination and the Lived Unconscious
Philip M. Bromberg - pp. 15-30
Reports from the Front: The Effects of Hurricane Katrina on Mental Health Professionals in New Orleans
Ghislaine Boulanger, Linda M. Floyd, Kathryn L. Nathan, Deborah R. Poitevant & Elsa Pool - pp. 31-44
Fearful Symmetry: Shared Trauma in New Orleans After Hurricane Katrina
Ghislaine Boulanger - pp. 45-58
Entering Night Country: Reflections on Self-Disclosure and Vulnerability
Stephanie R. Brody - pp. 59-71
When the Analyst's Protected Space is Breached: Commentary on Paper by Stephanie R. Brody
Martin Stephen Frommer - pp. 72-74
Navigating Night Country: Self-Disclosure, Mortality, Community
Maureen Murphy - pp. 75-79
Response to Commentaries on Entering Night Country: Analytic Self-Disclosure as Divergent Conflict
Stephanie R. Brody - pp. 80-101
The Systems Metaphor in Therapy Discourse: Introducing Systems Intelligence
Frank Martela & Esa Saarinen - pp. 102-115
Psychotherapy is an Emergent Process: In Favor of Acknowledging Hermeneutics and Against the Privileging of Systematic Empirical Research
Donnel B. Stern - pp. 116-122
There is Room for Even More Doublethink: The Perilous Status of Psychoanalytic Research
Peter Fonagy - pp. 123-127
Response to Fonagy
Irwin Z. Hoffman - pp. 128
Corrigendum
Issue 2
11 articles- pp. 129-138
The Development of a Personal View of the Psychoanalytic Field
Otto F. Kernberg - pp. 139-149
Moments of Truth and Perverse Scenarios in Psychoanalysis: Revisiting Davies' “Love in the Afternoon”
Jonathan H. Slavin - pp. 150-169
From Truth or Dare to Show and Tell: Reflections on Childhood Ritual, Play, and the Evolution of Symbolic Life
Jill Gentile - pp. 170-179
My Enfant Terrible is Twenty: A Discussion of Slavin's and Gentile's Retrospective Reconsideration of “Love in the Afternoon”
Jody Messler Davies - pp. 180-196
The Fetish in Nicole Krauss' Great House and in Clinical Practice
Joye Weisel-Barth - pp. 197-210
Why Psychoanalysis Must not Discard Science and Human Nature
Carlo Strenger - pp. 211-224
Because the Rock Will not Read the Article: A Discussion of Jeremy D. Safran's Critique of Irwin Z. Hoffman's “Doublethinking our way to Scientific Legitimacy”
Philip Cushman - pp. 225-229
Response to Strenger
Irwin Z. Hoffman - pp. 230-242
Solving Clinical Puzzles: Memory as Relational Process
Lucyann Carlton & Estelle Shane - pp. 243-258
Analytic Enclaves and Analytic Outcome: A Clinical Mystery
Joyce Slochower - pp. 259
Corrigendum
Issue 3
13 articles- pp. 261-268
Credo
Martin S. Bergmann - pp. 269-270
Introduction: A Dialectical Constructivist Understanding of Self-Interest and Social Responsibility
Neil Altman - pp. 271-286
Dialectical Constructivism in Historical Context: Expertise and the Subject of Late Modernity
Lynne Layton - pp. 287-295
Response to Layton: Considering the Sociopolitical Context of Dialectical Constructivism
Irwin Z. Hoffman - pp. 296-314
Meaning, Mortality, and the Search for Realness and Reciprocity: An Evolutionary/Existential Perspective on Hoffman's Dialectical Constructivism
Malcolm Owen Slavin - pp. 315-323
Response to Slavin: Considering the Evolutionary and Existential Contexts of Dialectical Constructivism
Irwin Z. Hoffman - pp. 324-339
The Unseen Spouse: Pitfalls and Possibilities for the Individual Therapist
Carla Leone - pp. 340-348
The Analyst and the Significant Other: Two's Company, Three's a Crowd: Commentary on Paper by Carla Leone
Mary-Joan Gerson - pp. 349-351
The Refused Rescue: Commentary on Paper by Carla Leone
Richard H. Fulmer - pp. 352-355
Reducing Pitfalls, Enhancing Possibilities: Reply to Commentaries
Carla Leone - pp. 356-361
Attachment and Artistic Expression
Clemens Loew - pp. 362-376
Out of Darkness: Reverberations of Trauma and its Creative Transformations
Sophia Richman - pp. 377-381
Coming out of Hiding: How the Analyst Faces and Transforms his or her Story and its Influence on Clinical Work: Commentary on Papers by Clemens Loew and Sophia Richman
Sandra G. Hershberg
Issue 4
13 articles- pp. 383-389
Intersubjective-Systems Theory: A Phenomenological-Contextualist Psychoanalytic Perspective
Robert D. Stolorow - pp. 390-392
Toward a Classical-Relational Synthesis: Introduction to a Case of “Perversion”
Stephen Seligman - pp. 393-407
The Chameleon Language of Perversion
Dana Amir - pp. 408-417
On Making Reparation to the Analyst's Idolized Countertransference: Commentary on Paper by Dana Amir
Stephen Hartman - pp. 418-422
Talking With Chameleons: The Role of Language-Games and Setting: Commentary on Paper by Dana Amir
Francisco J. Gonzalez - pp. 423-425
The Word That Expropriates the Flower: Reply to Commentaries
Dana Amir - pp. 426-438
On Being, Disappearing, and Becoming: A Journey of Surrender
Mitchel Becker & Boaz Shalgi - pp. 439-444
Movement Requires Nothing: Commentary on Paper by Becker and Shalgi
Francisco J. Gonzalez - pp. 445-448
The Whole of the No-thing: Reply to Commentary
Mitchel Becker & Boaz Shalgi - pp. 449-463
God at an Impasse: Devotion, Social Justice, and the Psychoanalytic Subject
Sue Grand - pp. 464-474
The Transference is Indeed a Cross: Commentary on Paper by Sue Grand
Lewis Aron - pp. 475-480
The Self, the Other, and God: Commentary on Paper by Sue Grand
Jeff Wells - pp. 481-484
Reply to Commentaries
Sue Grand
Issue 5
19 articles- pp. 485-486
Introduction to Two-Part Panel on the Concept of the “Analytic Field”
Steven H. Cooper - pp. 487-501
Field Theory in Psychoanalysis, Part I: Harry Stack Sullivan and Madeleine and Willy Baranger
Donnel B. Stern - pp. 502-513
Field Theory: Commentary on Paper by Donnel B. Stern
John C. Foehl - pp. 514-522
Field of Vision: Radical Uncertainty and the Analyst's Conduct: Commentary on Paper by Donnel B. Stern
Don Troise - pp. 523-527
Why is Comparative Psychoanalysis so Difficult? Response to Commentaries by Foehl and Troise
Donnel B. Stern - pp. 528-541
Meditations on Aggression, Loss, Discovery, and Influence in Psychoanalysis
Marc Rehm - pp. 542-547
Shaping and Discovering: Thoughts About Marc Rehm's Meditations
Joyce Slochower - pp. 548-550
Response to Joyce Slochower
Marc Rehm - pp. 551-553
Introduction: The Immigrant Analyst: Journeys Beyond Otherness
Hazel Ipp - pp. 554-567
The Immigrant Analyst: A Journey From Double Consciousness Toward Hybridity
Glenys Lobban - pp. 568-580
On Leaving Home and the Flight From Trauma
Dori Laub - pp. 581-588
“Poison Cookies”: Glimpses From the Psychoanalytic Laboratory: Introduction to Case Presentation and Commentaries
Lewis Aron - pp. 589-598
“Poison Cookies”
Katherine Oram - pp. 599-601
Discussion of Katherine Oram's Case
Sheldon Bach - pp. 602-607
Backing Into the Fray: Commentary on Paper by Katherine Oram
Mary-Joan Gerson - pp. 608-612
On Love and Fortitude: A Relational Discussion of “Poison Cookies”
Sue Grand - pp. 613-619
Dysregulated Rhythms and the “Grip” of the Context: A Discussion of the Paper “Poison Cookies” by Katherine Oram
Steven H. Knoblauch - pp. 620-624
Response to “Poison Cookies” Discussions
Katherine Oram - pp. 625
Announcement
Issue 6
16 articles- pp. 627-629
Introduction to the Second Panel on the Concept of the “Analytic Field”
John C. Foehl - pp. 630-645
Field Theory in Psychoanalysis, Part 2: Bionian Field Theory and Contemporary Interpersonal/Relational Psychoanalysis
Donnel B. Stern - pp. 646-653
Analysts in Search of an Author: Voltaire or Artemisia Gentileschi? Commentary on “Field Theory in Psychoanalysis, Part 2: Bionian Field Theory and Contemporary Interpersonal/Relational Psychoanalysis” by Donnel B. Stern
Antonino Ferro & Giuseppe Civitarese - pp. 654-659
Fields of Thought and Action in Psychoanalysis: Commentary on Paper by Donnel B. Stern
Peter Carnochan - pp. 660-666
Field Conditions: Discussion of Donnel B. Stern's Field Theory in Psychoanalysis
Rachael Peltz & Peter Goldberg - pp. 667-673
Comparing Field Theories
Howard B. Levine - pp. 674-682
Responses to Commentaries by Ferro and Civitarese, Carnochan, Peltz and Goldberg, and Levine
Donnel B. Stern - pp. 683-699
Putting our Heads Together: Mentalizing Systems
Margy Sperry - pp. 700-707
Discussion: Putting our Heads Together; Mentalizing Systems
Adrienne Harris - pp. 708-714
A Fluctuating Capacity to Mentalize: Affect Scripts and Self-State Systems as (not so) “Strange Attractors”: A Discussion of Margy Sperry's “Putting our Heads Together: Mentalizing Systems”
Richard A. Chefetz - pp. 715-719
Response to Commentaries
Margy Sperry - pp. 720-732
Trauma Triangles and Parallel Processes: Geometry and the Supervisor/Trainee/Patient Triad
Dana L. Castellano - pp. 733-736
Messages Conveyed in Supervision: Commentary on Paper by Dana L. Castellano, Psy.D.
Sandra Buechler - pp. 737-743
Ethics, Boundaries, and Supervision. Commentary on Trauma Triangles and Parallel Processes: Geometry and the Supervisor/Trainee/Patient Triad
Elizabeth Goren - pp. 744-748
All in the Family: Reply to Commentaries
Dana L. Castellano