Issue 1
11 articlesIn Honor of Louis Sander’s Contributions to Psychoanalytic Theory, Practice, and ResearchOriginal Articles
- pp. 3-14
Louis Sander: Remembrances and Reflections on His Contributions
Jeremy P. Nahum - pp. 15-21
Louis Sander and Contemporary Psychoanalysis: Nonlinear Dynamic Systems, Developmental Research, Clinical Process and the Search for Core Principles
Stephen Seligman - pp. 22-35
Sander’s Life Work, on Mother-Infant Vitality and the Emerging Person
Colwyn Trevarthen - pp. 36-51
Neuro-Evolutionary Foundations of Infant Minds: From Psychoanalytic Visions of How Primal Emotions Guide Constructions of Human Minds toward Affective Neuroscientific Understanding of Emotions and Their Disorders
Jaak Panksepp, Andrea Clarici, Marie Vandekerckhove & Yoram Yovell - pp. 52-65
And Then There Was Intersubjectivity: Addressing Child Self and Mutual Dysregulation During Traumatic Play: In Memory of Louis Sander
Daniel S. Schechter - pp. 66-76
David and Goliath: What If He Loses?
J. Miguel Hoffmann - pp. 77-87
A Most Complex Paradox: Rethinking the Individual
William J. Coburn - pp. 88-97
Momentums of Meeting
Lora Heims Tessman - pp. 98-108
“Polarity, Paradox and the Organizing Process in Development”; Parent-Infant Psychotherapy and Child Analytic Technique: In Honor of Louis Sander
James M. Herzog
Issue 2
11 articlesRelational Turn: How and Why It HappenedOriginal Articles
- pp. 114-122
Memories and Reflections on My Life in Relational Psychoanalysis
Anthony Bass - pp. 123-126
Emotional Phenomenology and Relationality: Forever the Twain Shall Meet
Robert D. Stolorow - pp. 127-135
Unformulated Experience and the Relational Turn
Donnel B. Stern - pp. 138-145
From “What’s American about American Psychoanalysis (2004)” to “What’s American History and Politics Got to Do with the Emergence of the Relational Turn (2012) and on to the American Nightmare: 2017”
Adrienne Harris - pp. 146-155
Relational Psychoanalysis as a “Child of the Sixties”: Politics, Innovation, and the Transition from Adolescence
Stephen Seligman - pp. 156-162
Feminine Issues and the Relational Turn: “The Girls Deserve More Respect”
Joye Weisel-Barth - pp. 163-173
Where Objects Were, Subjects Now May Be: The Work of Jessica Benjamin and Reimagining Maternal Subjectivity in Transitional Space
Rachel Kabasakalian McKay - pp. 174-178
Afterwardness and the Postrelational Turn
Christina Emanuel
Introduction to Harris and Seligman
Issue 5
11 articlesEmerging Analytic VoicesOriginal Articles
- pp. 297-304
Community Psychoanalysis: A Contribution to an Emerging Paradigm
George Bermudez - pp. 305-317
The Conscious and Unconscious Procedures, Motives and Meanings of Pre-Pubescent Problem Sexual Behavior
Gerard P. Webster - pp. 318-325
Please Don’t Go, We Love You So: Recognizing Unrecognized Early Loss in Adoptees
Sona DeLurgio - pp. 326-334
Three Elaborations of Complexity Theory: An Aid to Applicability
Michael Pariser - pp. 335-343
The Experience of Relationally Embedded Individuality and the Analytic Attitude of Affect-Respect That Fosters It
Peter N. Maduro - pp. 344-357
Accommodating Brandchaft: Theory and Transference in Analytic Training
Darren Haber - pp. 358-366
Working Through the Unconscious Assumption of Neglect
Michelle Harwell - pp. 367-373
The Go-Between: The Psychoanalyst as Love Mediator
Carola M. Kaplan - pp. 374-380
A Tale of Two Treatments
Karen Kay
Issue 6
17 articlesThe Future of Psychoanalysis in Undergraduate Education: An Innovative Collaboration between The Colorado College and The Chicago Psychoanalytic InstituteIntroduction to Part I
Part I: Psychoanalysis and Undergraduate Education
Introduction to Part II
Part II: The Chicago Course
- pp. 398-402
Chapter 1: The Origin and Structure of the Course
Marcia D-S. Dobson & John H. Riker - pp. 403-419
Chapter 2: Responses by the Students to Classes Taught by the Visiting Analysts
Marcia D-S. Dobson & John H. Riker - pp. 420-427
Chapter 3: The Class at Allen Siegel’s Home
Marcia D-S. Dobson & John H. Riker
Introduction to Part III
Part III: Short Papers from the Course
Part III: Short Papers from the Course
Introduction to Part IV
Part IV: Capstone Papers for the Psychoanalysis Minor
- pp. 444-449
Chapter 1: Healing the Healer’s Art: A Letter to My Professors
Rin Gentry - pp. 450-459
Chapter 2: To the Lighthouse and the Oedipal Triangle: Impotence, Erotic Degradation, and the Oedipus Complex from Freudian and Self-Psychological Perspectives
Caroline Beaton - pp. 460-468
Chapter 3: Beyond the Symptoms: Generalizations and Distinctions between Eating Disorders with Different Symptom Manifestations in Psychoanalysis
Emily Elder
Issue 7
7 articlesNarrative: A Central Organizer of Lived ExperienceOriginal Articles
- pp. 476-484
An Essay on Narrative, Reality, and Imagination
R. Curtis Bristol - pp. 485-493
Stories That Open and Stories That Close: Theoretical and Clinical Narratives in Psychoanalysis
Joye Weisel-Barth - pp. 494-511
Narrative and Meaning: Exploring the Unexplored—How Context, Recontextualization, and Repetition Can Enlighten and Inform Living, Learning, and Leading
Shawn Mahoney - pp. 512-524
Narrative as a Mode of Knowing
Daniel Goldin - pp. 525-528
Myths and Their Consequences
Joseph D. Lichtenberg
Issue 8
9 articlesThe Influence of Neuroscience on Psychoanalysts: A Contemporary PerspectiveOriginal Articles
- pp. 534-544
Developing a Capacity for Bodily Concern: Antonio Damasio and the Psychoanalysis of Body–Mind Relationship
Riccardo Lombardi - pp. 545-556
Neuroscience and the Embodiment of Psychoanalysis—With an Appreciation of Damasio’s Contribution
Jon Sletvold - pp. 557-570
Listening to Somatosensory States in Psychoanalysis: Body, Trauma, and Poetry
Michele S. Piccolo - pp. 571-581
The Influence of Neuroscience on the Theory and Approaches to Panic Disorder and the Impact of Trauma
Fredric N. Busch - pp. 582-595
Neuropsychoanalytic Explorations: Linking Practice, Theory, and Research
Luba Kessler & Richard J. Kessler
Discussion
Issue 3-4
16 articlesThe Ubiquity of Unconscious CommunicationOriginal Articles
- pp. 184-188
Now Streaming: On Unconscious Communications in the Analytic Process
Theodore J. Jacobs - pp. 189-197
Ordinary Unconscious Communication in the Therapist/Patient Relationship
Anthony Bass - pp. 198-212
Unconscious Communication in the Intersubjective Analytic Field at Times of Separation, Loss, and Termination
Joseph A. Cancelmo - pp. 213-223
Emotional Communication and the Unconscious in the Analytic Setting
Paul Geltner - pp. 224-230
The Imp in the iPhone
Sherry Salman - pp. 231-233
Close Encounters in Intimacy
Joseph D. Lichtenberg - pp. 234-240
Working with Enactment: The Analyst’s Willingness to Be Both Confrontive and Vulnerable
Karen J. Maroda - pp. 241-249
Enactment as Unconscious Communication
Caroline Polmear - pp. 250-255
Clinical Implications of Unconscious Communication in the Analytic Dyad; Towards a Deeper Therapeutic Engagement
Elizabeth Anne Seward - pp. 256-267
A Story of a Split and Hope
Amina Taiber & Yossi Tamir - pp. 268-275
Incongruent Feeling States in Psychoanalysis
Valerie Frankfeldt - pp. 276-281
The Psychoanalysis Between Sándor Ferenczi and Elizabeth Severn: Mutuality, Unconscious Communication, and the Development of Countertransference Analysis
Arnold Wm. Rachman - pp. 282-291
Virtual Reality as a Selfobject Function: Towards Reclaiming Unlived Potentialities
Gabriela Mann