Issue 1
10 articles- pp. 1-12
Isolation
Paul Williams - pp. 13-19
Did You Say He Has a Hitler Mustache?: Analytic Vulnerability and Destabilization in the Face of Trauma
Sandra Silverman - pp. 20-27
Inhabiting Mutuality—The Mutuality of Vulnerable States in Psychotherapy: A Discussion of “Did You Say He Has a Hitler Mustache?: Analytic Vulnerability and Destabilization in the Face of Trauma”
Anthony Bass - pp. 28-34
Uncanny Resonances: A Discussion of “Did You Say He Has a Hitler Mustache?: Analytic Vulnerability and Destabilization in the Face of Trauma”
Joyce Slochower - pp. 35-50
Childless
Rebecca Harrington - pp. 51-58
“Dying for a Baby” and Other “Confusions of Tongues”: A Discussion of “Childless”
Katie Gentile - pp. 59-68
What Women Want: A Discussion of “Childless”
Hillary Grill - pp. 69-74
Collapsing Space: Reply to Gentile and Grill
Rebecca Harrington - pp. 75-91
Bread and Roses: Empathy and Recognition
Rachel Kabasakalian McKay - pp. 92-102
Discussion of “Bread and Roses: Empathy and Recognition”
Lewis Aron
Issue 2
13 articles- pp. 105-121
Transgenerational Hauntings: Toward a Social Psychoanalysis and an Ethic of Dis-Illusionment
Lynne Layton - pp. 122-142
History’s Ethical Demand: Memory, Denial, and Responsibility in the Wake of the Holocaust
Roger Frie - pp. 143-150
Excitations of Vengeance: The We-Ness of History
Sue Grand - pp. 151-158
Meeting Across History: A Dialogue
Roger Frie & Sue Grand - pp. 159-164
Does Truth Matter? Introduction to Papers by Jody Davies, Shlomit Gadot, and Donnel Stern
Malcolm Owen Slavin - pp. 165-171
Truth and Consequence: Alternative Facts and Discordant Realities
Jody Messler Davies - pp. 172-188
Post-Truth, Hegemonic Discourse and the Psychoanalytic Task of Decentering
Shlomit Yadlin-Gadot - pp. 189-196
Constructivism in the Age of Trump: Truth, Lies, and Knowing the Difference
Donnel B. Stern - pp. 197-215
Taking the Sting Out: Manifesting Aggression and Containing Difficult States in a Relational Group Psychotherapy
Ravit Raufman - pp. 216-225
Difficult Days: The Continuing Evolution of Relational Group Analysis: Discussion of “Taking the Sting Out: Manifesting Aggression and Containing Difficult States in a Relational Group Psychotherapy”
Robert Grossmark - pp. 226-232
Discussion of “Taking the Sting Out: Manifesting Aggression and Containing Difficult States in a Relational Group Psychotherapy”
Haim Weinberg - pp. 233-237
Difficult Days: On the Use of Theory in Group Psychotherapy Reply to Grossmark and Weinberg
Ravit Raufman
Issue 3
13 articlesIntroduction
- pp. 243-251
A Postcard from the Fortress: Vulnerable Patients and Therapists in a Changing European Mindscape
Francesco Andreucci - pp. 252-268
Migrants Living in Very Hard Situations: Extreme Migratory Mourning (The Ulysses Syndrome)
Joseba Achotegui - pp. 269-283
Drops of Light into the Darkness: Migration, Immigration, and Human Rights
Spyros D. Orfanos - pp. 284-305
I’mprovisation – Therapists’ Subjective Experience during Improvisational Moments in the Clinical Encounter
Assael Romanelli, Galia S. Moran & Orya Tishby - pp. 306-310
Therapists’ Subjective Experience during Improvisational Moments in the Clinical Encounter-Discussion of I’mprovisation
Steven H. Knoblauch - pp. 311-320
Discussion of “I’mprovisation–Therapists’ Subjective Experience during Improvisational Moments in the Clinical Encounter”
Philip A. Ringstrom - pp. 321-327
“Like Walking Backwards” – The Challenge of Theater Improvisation Paradigm within the Psychotherapeutic Discourse – Reply to Commentaries
Assael Romanelli - pp. 328-345
Poetic Confluence: A Sociological Analysis of an Enigmatic Moment
Robin Wooffitt - pp. 346-354
Mind Leaks: A Commentary on Wooffitt’s Poetic Confluence: A Sociological Analysis of an Enigmatic Moment
Etzel Cardeña - pp. 355-360
Commentary on Robin Wooffitt’s Paper “Poetic Confluence: A Sociological Analysis of an Enigmatic Moment”
Anssi Peräkylä - pp. 361-366
Reply to Commentaries
Robin Wooffitt - pp. 367-381
The Bilingualism of the Language of the Victim and the Language of the Victimizer
Dana Amir
Issue 4
13 articles- pp. 383-387
Introduction
Adrienne Harris - pp. 388-403
Bion’s O and His Pseudo-Mystical Path
Giuseppe Civitarese - pp. 404-417
Where are We When We are At-One? Discussion of Bion’s O and His Pseudo-Mystical Path
Peter Goldberg - pp. 418-426
Civitarese on O: Bion’s Pragmatic and “Aesthetic-Intersubjective” Theory of Truth, the Growth of the Mind, and Therapeutic Action: Discussion of “Bion’s O and His Pseudo-Mystical Path”
Beth Steinberg - pp. 427-434
Reply to Goldberg and Steinberg
Giuseppe Civitarese - pp. 435-450
Airless Worlds: The Traumatic Sequelae of Identification with Parental Negation
Steven Stern - pp. 451-459
Discussion: “Airless Worlds: The Traumatic Sequalae of Identification with Parental Negation” Steven Stern
Adrienne Harris - pp. 460-469
Double Binds, Unhealing Wounds: Discussion of “Airless Worlds: The Traumatic Sequelae of Identification with Parental Negation”
Daniel Shaw - pp. 470-476
Breathing Together: Reply to Harris and Shaw
Steven Stern - pp. 477-492
Who Has the Right to Mourn?: Relational Deference and the Ranking of Grief
Harvey Peskin - pp. 493-500
Grieve with Me: Discussion of “Who Has the Right to Mourn?: Relational Deference and the Ranking of Grief”
Martin Stephen Frommer - pp. 501-506
On Grief, Guilt, Shame, and Nostalgia. Discussion of “Who Has the Right to Mourn?: Relational Deference and the Ranking of Grief”
Thomas Rosbrow - pp. 507-513
Who Suffered More? Rivalry for the Right to Be Loved: Discussion of “Who Has the Right to Mourn?: Relational Deference and Rankings of Grief”
Peter Shabad
Issue 5
14 articles- pp. 515-531
Navigating the Relational Psychic Economy of Disability: The Case of M
Brian Watermeyer, Xanthe Hunt, Leslie Swartz & Poul Rohleder - pp. 560-574
The Therapeutics of the Fee in Psychoanalysis
David Pauley - pp. 575-582
Discussion of “The Therapeutics of the Fee in Psychoanalysis”
Brenda Berger - pp. 583-590
The Frame, Within and Without: Discussion of “The Therapeutics of the Fee in Psychoanalysis”
Rachel Sopher - pp. 591-593
The Fee and the Analyst’s Life Cycle: Reply to Berger and Sopher
David Pauley - pp. 594-609
Tyler in the Labyrinth: A Young Child’s Journey from Chaos to Coherence
Stephanie Pass - pp. 610-618
Discussion of “Tyler in the Labyrinth: A Young Child’s Journey from Chaos to Coherence”
Phyllis Cath - pp. 619-626
Disrupting the Narrative of Transgenerational Psychic Trauma: Discussion of “Tyler in the Labyrinth: A Young Child’s Journey from Chaos to Coherence”
Lauren Levine - pp. 627-631
What Child Work Stands to Teach Us: Discussion of “Tyler in the Labyrinth: A Young Child’s Journey from Chaos to Coherence”
Rachael Peltz - pp. 632-636
“A Place to Enter and in Which to Feel”: Reply to Cath, Levine, and Peltz
Stephanie Pass
It Takes Time: Reflections on Aging
- pp. 532-535
Some Reflections on Erikson’s Ninth Stage of Life: Introduction to the Panel on Aging
Estelle Shane - pp. 536-542
Not Me: The Vicissitudes of Aging
Barbara Pizer - pp. 543-547
“That Time of Year Thou May’st in Me Behold”: An Analyst Encounters Aging
Stuart A. Pizer - pp. 548-559
Getting Better All the Time?
Joyce Slochower
Issue 6
12 articles- pp. 637-652
Old Objects Die Hard: Generational Ruptures
Jill Salberg - pp. 653-658
Phantom Threads, Invisible Bridges: Discussion of “Old Objects Die Hard: Generational Ruptures”
Seth Aronson - pp. 659-662
Listening to Fragments, Ongoing Conversation: Reply to Aronson
Jill Salberg - pp. 663-675
Psychoanalysis in Real Time: Temporal Troubles in the Clinical Dyad
Sarah Schoen - pp. 676-681
Time Waits for No One: Discussion of “Psychoanalysis in Real Time: Temporal Troubles in the Clinical Dyad”
Andrew B. Druck - pp. 682-688
Dimensional Time: Discussion of “Psychoanalysis in Real Time: Temporal Troubles in the Clinical Dyad”
Jack Foehl - pp. 689-694
Self, Interrupted: Temporal Enactments and the Loss of Going-On-Being: Reply to Druck and Foehl
Sarah Schoen - pp. 695-710
Disguised Autobiography as Clinical Case Study
Chaim E. Bromberg & Lewis Aron - pp. 711-725
Contempt Management: You’re Crazy, I’m Not
Lawrence Josephs & Jett Stone - pp. 726-732
Hot Potatoes, Sweet Potatoes, and Bad Objects: Discussion of “Contempt Management: You’re Crazy, I’m Not”
Amy Schwartz Cooney - pp. 733-741
In the Land of the Antilibidinal Ego: Dependency, Denial, Dissociation, and Contempt: Discussion of “Contempt Management: You’re Crazy, I’m Not”
Brent Willock - pp. 742-746
Topsy Turvy and the Relational Vortex: Reply to Schwartz Cooney and Willock
Lawrence Josephs & Jett Stone