Issue 1
11 articles- pp. 1-13
The Analyst’s Generous Involvement: Recognition and the “Tension of Tenderness”
Stuart A. Pizer - pp. 14-28
A Clinical Exploration of Moving Anger Forward: Intimacy, Anger, and Creative Freedom
Barbara Pizer - pp. 29-36
Affective Relatedness in Stance and Process: Commentary on Papers by Stuart A. Pizer and Barbara Pizer
John C. Foehl - pp. 37-45
From No Name Woman to Birth of Integrated Identity: Trauma-Based Cultural Dissociation in Immigrant Women and Creative Integration
Kris Yi - pp. 46-51
Discussion of Kris Yi’s Paper “From No Name Woman to Birth of Integrated Identity: Trauma-Based Cultural Dissociation in Immigrant Women and Creative Integration”
Kimberlyn Leary - pp. 52-55
Psychoanalysis’s Cultural Dissociation Meets Ethnic Minorities: Reply to Commentary by Kimberlyn Leary
Kris Yi - pp. 56-71
The Bilingual Therapist and Transference to Language: Language use in Therapy and its Relationship to Object Relational Context
Sophie D. Walsh - pp. 72-87
The Princess and the Penis: A Post Postmodern Queer-y Tale
Hilary Offman - pp. 88-102
Psychical Transmissions: Freud, Spiritualism, and the Occult
Claudie Massicotte - pp. 103-108
Freud and the Psychoanalysis of Telepathy: Commentary on Claudie Massicotte’s “Psychical Transmissions”
Marsha Aileen Hewitt - pp. 109-121
Telepathic Entanglements: Where are we Today? Commentary on Paper by Claudie Massicotte
Janine de Peyer
Issue 2
12 articles- pp. 123-128
Credo
Joseph D. Lichtenberg - pp. 129-145
The Dead Baby
Orna Guralnik - pp. 146-153
How to Come to Terms With the Shadows of the Past in the Treatment of Third-Generation Patients: A Commentary on Orna Guralnik’s Paper “The Dead Baby”
Werner Bohleber - pp. 154-162
The Right to Our Own History: Paradoxical Transference and the “Friendly Foreigner” Commentary on Orna Guralnik Paper
Haydée Faimberg - pp. 163-166
Dead Babies: Response to Orna Guralnik’s Paper
Jeanne Wolff Bernstein - pp. 167-174
History Dislocated in a Nightmare: Responses to Commentaries
Orna Guralnik - pp. 175-192
Psychodynamic Formulation in the Age of Neuroscience: A Dynamical Systems Model
Yakov Shapiro - pp. 193-209
From Dead to Alive: Desire, Dissociation and Passion in the Analytic Dyad
Eric Sherman - pp. 210-226
Reconsidering Self and Identity Through a Dialogue Between Neuroscience and Psychoanalytic Theory
Michael J. Gerson - pp. 227-235
The One-Sidedness of a Dialogue Between Neuroscience and Psychoanalysis
Stefanie Solow Glennon - pp. 236-246
Brain Science as the Analytic Fourth: Commentary on Paper by Michael J. Gerson
Terry Marks-Tarlow - pp. 247-251
A Meta-Commentary: Response to the Commentaries of Marks-Tarlow and Solow Glennon
Michael J. Gerson
Issue 3
14 articles- pp. 253-266
Imagining Fear: Attachment, Threat, and Psychic Experience
Arietta Slade - pp. 267-276
Discussion of Slade “Imagining Fear”
Adrienne Harris - pp. 277-281
Giving Words to the Unsayable: The Healing Power of Describing What Happened
Alicia F. Lieberman - pp. 282-286
“Ghosts in the Psychoanalytic Nursery”: Response to Lieberman & Harris
Arietta Slade - pp. 287-288
Psychoanalytic Depth: A Contemporary Concept?
John C. Foehl - pp. 289-303
A Phenomenology of Depth
John C. Foehl - pp. 304-316
On Time and Deepening in Psychoanalysis
Lucy LaFarge - pp. 317-331
Going Deep, Going Wide
Irwin Hirsch - pp. 332-340
Depth, Perception, and Action: Past, Present, and Future
Paul L. Wachtel - pp. 341-357
“With you I’m Born Again”: Themes and Fantasies of Birth and the Family Circumstances Surrounding Birth as These are Mutually Evoked in Patient and Analyst
Lewis Aron - pp. 358-363
Discussion of Lewis Aron’s Paper for Dialogues
Joe Lichtenberg - pp. 364-373
The Mutually Facilitating Maturational Matrix
Brent Willock - pp. 374-386
Birth—From Metaphor to Reality in Jewish Literature and Psychoanalysis: Discussion of Lewis Aron’s Paper “With you I’m Born Again”
Ruth Kara-Ivanov Kaniel - pp. 387-397
For all we Know: Clinical Creativity as a Dialectic Between Knowledge and Unknownness
Gianni Nebbiosi
Issue 4
14 articles- pp. 399-401
Attachment, Family Therapy, and Relational Psychoanalysis: Introduction to Virginia Goldner’s “Romantic Bonds, Binds, and Ruptures: Couples on the Brink”
Stephen Seligman - pp. 402-418
Romantic Bonds, Binds, and Ruptures: Couples on the Brink
Virginia Goldner - pp. 419-426
When the Context is in the Room: Extending the Relational Paradigm
Paul L. Wachtel - pp. 427-432
What is Happening With Bill and Jane?
Leslie Greenberg - pp. 433-440
Attachment, Recognition, and Secondary Trauma: Reply to Commentaries
Virginia Goldner - pp. 441-443
Introduction to Panel: Dissociation, Enactment and Collective Trauma: The Role of Psychoanalysis
Chana Ullman - pp. 444-455
Clinical Practice With Cases of Extreme Traumatization 40 Years After the Military Coup in Chile (1973–1990): The Impact on the Therapists
María Isabel Castillo & Margarita Díaz Cordal - pp. 456-461
Hauntings and Healings: Response to Castillo and Cordal
Gillian Straker - pp. 462-466
Psychoanalysts Working With Patients Who Have Been Subjected to Torture Due to Socio-Political Circumstances: Possible or Impossible Challenge?
Silvia Flechner - pp. 467-482
Ordinary Sadism in the Consulting Room
Veronica Csillag - pp. 483-487
Analytic Sadism and Analytic Restraint
Joyce Slochower - pp. 488-493
Sadism, Penetration, and the Negotiation of Desire: Commentary on Paper by Csillag
Christopher Bonovitz - pp. 494-497
Desire, Domination, Sadism, and the Degradation of Love: Reply to Commentaries by Joyce Slochower and Christopher Bonovitz
Veronica Csillag
Issue 5
13 articles- pp. 499-515
Inside the Revolution: Power, Sex, and Technique in Freud’s “‘Wild’ Analysis”
Muriel Dimen - pp. 516-520
The Revolution Betrayed: A Commentary on Muriel Dimen’s Inside the Revolution
Adam Phillips - pp. 521-522
On Not Quite Taking Up the Gauntlet: Reply to Adam Phillips
Muriel Dimen - pp. 523-524
Working With Disruption in the Supervisory Relationship: Introduction to Panel
Joan Sarnat & Stephen Seligman - pp. 525-531
Psychoanalytic Supervision in a Heterogeneous Theoretical Context: Benefits and Complications
Emanuel Berman - pp. 532-539
Disruption and Working Through in the Supervisory Process: A Vignette From Supervision of a Psychoanalytic Candidate
Joan Sarnat - pp. 540-548
Supervision and Analysis at a Crossroad: The Development of the Analytic Therapist: Discussion of Papers by Joan Sarnat and Emanuel Berman
Anthony Bass - pp. 549-557
Making the Best of What Has Been Done to You and of What You Yourself Have Done: Commentary on Papers by Joan Sarnat and Emanuel Berman
Franco Borgogno - pp. 558-561
The Relational Turn in Italy: Its History and Evolution - Introduction to Panel
Vittorio Lingiardi & Susanna Federici - pp. 562-577
Attachment and Relational Psychoanalysis: Bowlby According to Mitchell
Francesco De Bei & Nino Dazzi - pp. 578-589
The Fortunes of the Relational Model in Italy: Notes on Publishing, Teaching, and Training
Giorgio Caviglia & Vittorio Lingiardi - pp. 590-600
The Relational Model: International Relations and Dissemination in Italy: A Historical Account
Gianni Nebbiosi & Susanna Federici - pp. 601-614
The Intersect of Psychoanalysis and Totalitarianism
Robert S. Wallerstein
Issue 6
12 articles- pp. 615-620
Introduction
Adrienne Harris - pp. 621-636
The Things We Carry: Finding/Creating the Object and the Analyst’s Self-Reflective Participation
Steven H. Cooper - pp. 637-647
The Analyst’s Private Space: Spontaneity, Ritual, Psychotherapeutic Action, and Self-Care
Ken Corbett - pp. 648-662
Paying Attention and Feeling Puzzled: The Analytic Mindset as an Agent of Therapeutic Change
Stephen Seligman - pp. 663-675
Three Pleas for a Measure of Uncertainty, Reverie, and Private Contemplation in the Chaotic, Interactive, Nonlinear Dynamic Field of Interpersonal/Intersubjective Relational Psychoanalysis
Anthony Bass - pp. 676-683
Relational Psychoanalysis and the Inner Life: Commentary on Cooper, Corbett, and Seligman
Donnel B. Stern - pp. 684-690
Clinical Reflection and Ritual as Forms of Participation and Interaction: Reply to Bass and Stern
Steven H. Cooper, Ken Corbett & Stephen Seligman - pp. 691-705
Analyzing Defenses or the First Glimmer of Development?
Basilio Bonfiglio - pp. 706-712
“I’ll Let You Be in My Dream if I Can Be in Yours.” Bob Dylan Talkin’ World War III Blues: ‘Dreaming’ Basilio Bonfiglio’s Paper
Steven H. Knoblauch - pp. 713-717
“I’ll Let You Be in My Dream if I Can Be in Yours.” Bob Dylan Talkin’ World War III Blues: ‘Dreaming’ Basilio Bonfiglio’s Paper: Reply to Commentary
Basilio Bonfiglio - pp. 718-732
Clinical Implications for the Expressions of Self and Identity in Adolescent Psychotherapy: Case Studies of a Vampiress and a Gangster
Michael J. Gerson