Issue 1
7 articlesContours of Analytic Time and Space: Interminable Treatments, Extra- and Post-Analytic Contact- pp. 4-19
The Puzzle of Interminable Treatments
Howard B. Levine - pp. 20-27
Interminability as a Legitimate Need
David Kitron - pp. 28-38
Revisiting “Analysis Terminable and Interminable”—Expressions of Death Instinct by Patients and Analyst
Phil Mollon - pp. 39-51
How Psychoanalysis is Like a Roach Motel: Better Termination Through Better Metaphors
Christina Emanuel - pp. 52-62
“Would You Speak to Me if We Saw Each Other on the Street?”: Reflections on Extra- and Post-Analytic Contact
Michael D. Clifford - pp. 63-74
Cumulative Trauma and Relational Competence
Lester Lenoff
Issue 2
13 articlesSándor Ferenczi and the Evolution of Psychoanalysis: Innovations in Theory and TechniqueOriginal Articles
- pp. 80-97
A “Work in Progress” Between Past, Present and Future: The Dream in/of Sándor Ferenczi
Franco Borgogno - pp. 98-111
Trauma—Revisited: Ferenczi and Modern Psychoanalysis
André Haynal - pp. 112-121
Ferenczi in Our Contemporary World
Judit Mészáros - pp. 122-134
The Contemporary Relevance of Sándor Ferenczi’s Concept of Identification with the Aggressor to the Diagnosis and Analytic Treatment of Chronic PTSD
Eva Dubska Papiasvili - pp. 135-144
Balancing Belonging and Self-Realization in Psychoanalysis: The Example of Sándor Ferenczi
Robert M. Prince - pp. 145-168
Sándor Ferenczi’s Analysis With Elizabeth Severn: “Wild Analysis” or Pioneering Treatment of the Incest Trauma
Arnold Wm. Rachman - pp. 171-177
Sándor Ferenczi’s Legacy: His Influence on My Work with Difficult Patients
Susan A. Klett - pp. 178-179
The Intruder
Michael Larivière - pp. 180-181
Notes on “Confusion of Tongues” by S. Ferenczi
M. W. - pp. 182-186
Sándor Ferenczi as “The Bridge”: My Journey From Phenomenology and Humanistic Psychotherapy to Relational Analysis
Arnold Wm. Rachman
Issue 3
11 articlesHow Do We Explain Psychoanalytic Improvement in Patients Who Have Been Highly Traumatized: An Exploration of Therapeutic Action in Psychoanalysis: Part IOriginal Articles
- pp. 191-203
Release from Developmental Arrest—Early Childhood Trauma: The Case of Mrs. E
Ron Bodansky - pp. 204-213
Psychoanalytic Treatment of Trauma and the Analyst’s Personality
Salman Akhtar - pp. 214-224
Psychoanalysis and Trauma
Howard B. Levine - pp. 225-233
The Traumatized Patient’s Word and Temperament as Elements of Successful Psychotherapeutic Treatment
Barnet D. Malin - pp. 234-239
Who is the Hero in the Life of the Traumatized Patient? Reflections on Bodansky’s Work with Mrs. E
Michael E. Shulman - pp. 240-250
The Paradox of Holding and Recognizing and the Local Moving Along of the Therapeutic Process
Susanna Federici-Nebbiosi - pp. 251-261
Out of Time: Siblings As Trauma Transmitters, Protectors, Sources of Courage: Meeting Ron Bodansky’s Protest
Donna M. Orange - pp. 262-264
Discussion of Ron Bodansky’s Case Presentation
Joseph D. Lichtenberg - pp. 265-272
Discussion of Ron Bodansky’s Case Presentation: How We Explain Psychoanalytic Improvement in Patients Who Have Been Severely Traumatized
Andrea Harms
Issue 4
11 articlesHow Do We Explain Psychoanalytic Improvement in Patients Who Have Been Highly Traumatized: An Exploration of Therapeutic Action in Psychoanalysis: Part IIOriginal Articles
- pp. 279-287
Affective Attunement, Vulnerability, Empathy: The Analytic Experience With Veronica
Paolo Stramba-Badiale - pp. 288-294
The Centrality of the Analyst’s Vulnerability to Interactive Regulation and Therapeutic Movement: Discussion of Paper by Paolo Stramba-Badiale, Titled, “Affective Attunement, Vulnerability, Empathy: The Analytic Experience With Veronica”
Steven H. Knoblauch - pp. 295-297
Discussion on “Affective Attunement, Vulnerability, Empathy: The Analytic Experience With Veronica” by Paolo Stramba-Badiale
Alan Kindler - pp. 298-314
Comment: “Affective Attunement, Vulnerability, Empathy: The Analytic Experience With Veronica” by Paolo Stramba-Badiale
Howard D. Lerner - pp. 315-321
Explaining Trauma in Highly Traumatized Patients: A Brain-Based Psychoanalytic Perspective
Estelle Shane - pp. 322-336
Overcoming Powerlessness in the Clinical Exchange With Traumatized Patients
Giovanni Liotti - pp. 337-352
Effective Therapeutic Action During Paolo Stramba-Badiale’s Analytic Experience With Veronica
Richard K. Hertel - pp. 353-363
An Intimate Success With Veronica
Susan L. Flinders - pp. 364-379
Treating Trauma: The Analyst’s Own Affect Regulation and Expression
Judith Guss Teicholz
Issue 5
13 articlesSpecialness, Grandiosity, Omnipotence, Entitlement, and Indulgence: Changing Theories of Narcissism, Attitudes, and CultureAn Interdisciplinary Perspective on the Dialectic Between Self Interest and Social Responsibilty
Psychoanalytic Theory and Clinical Process
- pp. 394-407
Traversing Narcissistic Pathways: From Freud to Present Times
Steven J. Ellman - pp. 408-420
Narcissism, Mania, and Analysts’ Envy of Patients
Irwin Hirsch - pp. 421-429
Positive Enactment as a Clinical Resource
Lester Lenoff - pp. 430-439
The Generation of the Romantic Ideal by a Self-Disordered Patient
Estelle Shane
Developmental Theory and Parental Issues
Sociocultural Perspective
Underpinnings of the Creative Process
Issue 6
10 articlesNever Ever Stop Learning More About SupervisionOriginal Articles
- pp. 528-537
Learning Objectives for Supervision: Benefits for Candidates and Beyond
Diana E. Moga & Deborah L. Cabaniss - pp. 538-553
Evaluation of Learning in Psychoanalytic Clinical Practice and Supervision
Jutta Kahl-Popp - pp. 554-583
Research Into the Relationship Experience in Supervision and Its Influence on the Psychoanalytical Identity Formation of Candidate Trainees
Waltraud Nagell, Lucia Steinmetzer, Ute Fissabre & Jan Spilski - pp. 584-605
A Bad and a Better Supervision Process; Actualized Relational Scenarios in Trainees: A Longitudinal Study of Nondisclosure in Psychodynamic Supervision
Hanne Strømme - pp. 606-618
The Vicissitudes of the Budapest Model of Supervision: Can We Learn From It Today?
Gábor Szőnyi - pp. 619-633
Proposal for a Common Language, Educationally-Informed Model of Psychoanalytic Supervision
C. Edward Watkins & Douglas J. Scaturo
Discussion
Issue 7
18 articlesAnalytic Lives in a Wounded WorldOriginal Articles
- pp. 649-662
From Memorials to Bomb Shelters: Navigating the Emotional Landscape of German Memory
Roger Frie - pp. 663-670
Memento Auschwitz: Growing Up in Post-War Germany
Martin Gossmann - pp. 680-689
Growing Up in Conflict: The Personal and the Political
Gillian Straker - pp. 690-701
“You’ve Got to Be Carefully Taught”: How Apartheid Was Lived and Learned on a South African Farm
Tessa Philips - pp. 708-718
My Long Journey Home: How the Acadian Exile Shaped My Life as a Therapist
Annette Richard - pp. 723-730
When the External Conflict Quietly Invades the Intimacy of the Therapeutic Dyad: Reflections on Conducting Therapy Within the Context of Political Upheaval
Eldad Iddan - pp. 731-740
Bearing Witness in Israel/Palestine: Finding My Voice
Rita Karuna Cahn - pp. 746-758
Circumstance of Birth: Life on the Color Line
Lynne Jacobs - pp. 766-775
War, Peace, and Promise-Making: Becoming a Late-Life Activist
Doris Brothers - pp. 776-779
The Autobiography of an Activist with a Small a
Joseph Lichtenberg
Discussion
- pp. 671-679
The Transformation of Guilt into a Sense of Responsibility: Discussion of Articles by Roger Frie and Martin Gossmann
Anna Ornstein - pp. 702-707
(White) Voices: Discussion of Articles by Gillian Straker and Tessa Philips
Amanda Kottler - pp. 719-722
Surrender to the Other: Meeting Annette Richard on the Historical, Personal, and Therapeutic Return from Exile
Donna M. Orange - pp. 741-745
Passion and Vulnerability: Clinical Practice and Witnessing in a Wounded Reality: Discussion of Articles by Eldad Iddan and Rita Karuna Cahn
Chana Ullman - pp. 759-765
Discovery and Repair: Discussion of the Article by Lynne Jacobs
Janice Gump - pp. 780-787
Returning to the Infinite—Kohut’s Empathy, Levinas’s Other, and the Ethical Imperative: Discussion of Articles by Doris Brothers and Joseph Lichtenberg
Maxwell Sucharov
Issue 8
10 articlesPsychoanalysis and Evolution: The Tentative ConnectionOriginal Articles
- pp. 792-809
The Primary Processes: A Preliminary Exploration of A-Rational Mentation from an Evolutionary Viewpoint
Susan E. Cutler & Linda A.W. Brakel - pp. 810-816
The Evolutionary Significance of the Primary Process—The Freudian Concept and Its Revision
Arnold H. Modell - pp. 817-830
The Making of Mind
R. Peter Hobson - pp. 831-846
Sex and Sexuality: An Evolutionary View
John Launer - pp. 847-863
Gerald Edelman’s Project: How Gerald Edelman’s Theory of Consciousness Completes Darwin’s Theory of Evolution and Provides a Basis for a Brain-Based Psychoanalytic Perspective
Lucyann Carlton & Estelle Shane - pp. 864-899
An Evolutionary Outlook on Motivation: Implications for the Clinical Dialogue
Mauricio Cortina & Giovanni Liotti