Issue 1
16 articlesPapers
- pp. 1-14
The Patient Who Had Me Committed: A Mutually Influential Relationship Between Patient and Analyst in the Context of a Broadening Analytic Frame
Alan Sirote - pp. 15-21
What You Do With What You Feel: Discussion of Alan Sirote’s “The Patient Who Had Me Committed”
Donnel B. Stern - pp. 22-29
“To Be Honest, Raphael, I Don’t [Like You]!”: Intersubjective Affirmation and Analytic Negotiation; Discussion of Alan Sirote’s Paper
Stuart A. Pizer - pp. 30-38
Breaching Frames, Expanding Horizons in Internal and External Worlds: Response to Stuart A. Pizer and Donnel B. Stern
Alan Sirote - pp. 39-79
Exploring Dissociation and Dissociative Identity Disorder: A Roundtable Discussion
Sheldon Itzkowitz, Richard A. Chefetz, Margaret Hainer, Karen Hopenwasser & Elizabeth F. Howell - pp. 80-83
Commentary on “Exploring Dissociation and Dissociative Identity Disorder: A Roundtable Discussion”
A. Steven Frankel - pp. 84-86
Altered (Self) States: A Meditation on “Exploring Dissociation and Dissociative Identity Disorder”
Richard B. Gartner - pp. 87-90
Just Listening: A Firsthand Account of Psychoanalytic Perspectives’ “Exploring Dissociation and Dissociative Identity Disorder: A Roundtable Discussion”
Maggie M. Robbins
Book Review
Creative Literary: Very Very Short Stories
Issue 2
19 articlesThe Supervisory RelationshipA Note From the Guest Editor
Interviews
- pp. 127-135
Honoring the Classical Tradition in Supervision: Interview with Martin S. Bergmann, PhD
Jill Choder-Goldman - pp. 136-142
Trauma and the “Confusion of Tongues” in Supervision: Interview with Arnold Rachman, PhD
Jill Choder-Goldman - pp. 143-155
The Supervisee as Analytic Coparticipant: Interview with Margaret Black, LCSW
Jill Choder-Goldman
Roundtable
- pp. 156-171
On Being a Supervisee: A Roundtable Discussion
Matt Aibel, Deborah Browning, Allison Katz, Stephen Malach, Barbara Nusbaum, Therese Rosenblatt & Jill Choder-Goldman - pp. 172-178
Everything Old is New Again: Reflections on Panel Discussion of the Supervisory Relationship
Mary Gail Frawley-O’Dea
Papers
Creative Literary Arts: Strong Women’s Voices in Poetry
- pp. 209
Notes from the Creative Literary Arts Editor
Bonnie Zindel - pp. 210-211
Favorite Photo: Hands on Her Hips, Long Black Sheath, Cloche Cocked Over an Eye
Joan Cusack Handler - pp. 212
Even a Psychologist Struggles to Compute
Joan Cusack Handler - pp. 213
Who Am I?
Claire Basescu - pp. 214-215
We Learn to Love the Density
Claire Basescu - pp. 216
The Smile
Rachel Berghash - pp. 217-218
Slam Poem: To the Voices in my Head
Maggie Bloomfield
Issue 3
16 articlesLetter to the Editor
Papers
- pp. 227-251
On Having No Thoughts: Freedom and Feminine Space
Jill Gentile - pp. 252-258
Living Remnants: A Reply to Jill Gentile
Ann Pellegrini - pp. 259-265
The Crisis in Gendered Representation: A Discussion of Jill Gentile’s “On Having No Thoughts: Freedom and Feminine Space”
Adrienne Harris - pp. 266-274
The Elusive Female Signifier: Reply to Pellegrini and Harris
Jill Gentile - pp. 275-288
Has Sexuality Anything to Do With War Trauma? Intergenerational Transmission and the Homosexual Imaginary
Steven Botticelli - pp. 289-294
War Sex: Discussion of Steven Botticelli’s “Has Sexuality Anything to Do With War Trauma: Intergenerational Transmission and the Homosexual Imaginary”
Steven H. Knoblauch - pp. 295-299
More to the Story: Commentary on Steven Botticelli’s “Has Sexuality Anything to Do With War Trauma? Intergenerational Transmission and the Homosexual Imaginary”
Jaine Darwin - pp. 300-303
Why Theory? Response to Knoblauch and Darwin
Steven Botticelli