This paper is written in celebration of the centenary of The Psychoanalytic Review and aims to br... more This paper is written in celebration of the centenary of The Psychoanalytic Review and aims to bring to life its entire history-100 years of publication. Almost as old as psychoanalysis itself, established by Jelliffe and White as a nonorthodox journal, and guided by all its subsequent editors, the Review has maintained its original mission: to serve as an open venue for all psychoanalytic perspectives, "a free forum for all." But the history of the Review is not without controversy. Freud made no original contributions to the Review. The paper unveils the Review's, rich history by looking briefly into the lives of some of its editors, the circumstances surrounding the creation of the Review (including pertinent correspondence between Freud and Brill and between Freud and Jelliffe), the years (with their engrossing politics) that followed the establishment of the Review until its merger with the journal Psychoanalysis (the official journal of NPAP), and the years that ...
Page 1. DISCUSSION: What is the Theoretical Yield in Studying the Psychoanalyst's Intentions... more Page 1. DISCUSSION: What is the Theoretical Yield in Studying the Psychoanalyst's Intentions? Alan J. Barnett The purpose of bringing together the present panel was to begin to approach the question of how analytic clinicians ...
The importance of the analyst’s creative involvement in the treatment process has grown with the ... more The importance of the analyst’s creative involvement in the treatment process has grown with the evolution of psychoanalysis. My intention in this issue is to bring together contributions on the analytic process from the common viewpoint of the analyst’s creative involvement that, when synthesized, may help generate additional theory on the analyst’s use of self. In considering the full range of what analysts do in treatment, explicitly and implicitly, to help promote progressive emotional communication, further thought is given here to the psychology of creativity in the analytic context. Arthur Robbins, in his article “Playing Along the Porous Edge of Chaos and Discipline: Pathways to the Creative Analytic Process,” develops a rich thesis on creative analytic dialogue by highlighting the personality dynamics and developmental cycle of the analyst as relevant to his or her creative motivation/intervention, giving the reader a remarkably effective experiential sense of the analyst’s oscillating affect states and involvements in the creative part of analysis. This nonlinear depiction of analytic process merges with a conceptual emphasis on the vital dimension of affective mirroring in examples from his psychoanalytic practice. Affective mirroring (providing patients in analytic therapy, and analysts in a supervisory group, with metaphorical understanding via affective resonance with their experience that may ultimately encompass interpretation) is importantly distinguished from empathy in promoting a loosening of the patient’s layers of protective adaptation. Michael Eigen, in his article “Distinction–Union Structure,” builds out the relevance and, indeed, centrality to treatment of the analyst’s creativity in holding and integrating opposite or multiple emotional tendencies expressed within oneself and the patient. Eigen recognizes what he calls distinction–union tendencies as internally experienced or perceived expressions of a more fundamental one-yet-many unity and structural framework in which differentiated movements of experience become hypothetically indistinguishable and unobservable. He discusses the religio-scientific-cultural background of this hypothetical single reality, including its presence in psychoanalytic theory, as an allusion to the creative core of the human condition, and as providing a conceptual basis for the analytic practitioner’s “generative presence.” Antonino Ferro, in his article, “Creativity in the Consulting Room: Factors of Fertility and Infertility,” views creativity in the analytic context as that which leads to “fertility in the analytic couple.” The loci of creativity in analysis, according to Ferro, all belong to the analytic couple’s dream functioning. Analytic efforts are directed to the ongoing development of the field. The analyst’s creative involvement in this development entails an ability to be “in unison” across a potential range of broadening oscillatory bands that allow for progressively saturated (metaphoric) interchanges/interpretations, in a setting of analytic receptivity and responsiveness
Recent formulations on the psychology of creativity in the analytic context, such as Albert Rothe... more Recent formulations on the psychology of creativity in the analytic context, such as Albert Rothenberg's “homospacial thinking,” Arnold Modell's “unconscious metaphoric thought,” and Thomas Ogden's “transformational thinking,” are discussed. These concepts enable previously unconnected experiences to be combined within the mind, while emphasizing interpersonal imaginative processes such as identification and empathic knowledge; the dual cognitive features of these formulations permit awareness of the complexity of feelings in oneself and others, essential for psychoanalytic creativity. Further, the articles in this issue are synthesized, highlighting the importance of the analyst making creative (new and valuable) use of his or her entire life experience, feelings, attitudes, and fantasies in treatment. From this dicussion, it is evident that the analyst's creative use of self should be more systematically incorporated into psychoanalytic theory of technique.
Wilco Achterberg A Ahmed Andrew H Ahn O Airaksinen Hamid I Akbarali Terence Allen Armando Almeida... more Wilco Achterberg A Ahmed Andrew H Ahn O Airaksinen Hamid I Akbarali Terence Allen Armando Almeida Anna Maria Aloisi Ananthila Anandacoomarasamy Lars L Andersen Martin Angst AV Apkarian C Argoff Pernilla Asenlof Ali Asghari Sadaf Ashraf Nadine Attal John Attia Shanaz Azad T Aziz Cathrine Baastrup Misha-Miroslav Backonja Jose M Baeyens D Bajic David Baker Federico Balague Giovanni Barbara Laurent Bardin Panos Barlas Alan Barnett M Barrot Daniel Barth Helene Bastuji Ulf Baumgärtner Lino Becerra Susanne Becker P Beek Annemerle Beerthuizen Gila Behzadi Inna Belfer Marie H Bement A Benham Dietmar Benke Michael I Bennett Jean-Jacques Benoliel Rafael Benoliel Odd-Geir Berge Michael Bernateck Enrica Bianchi Mauro Bianchi Joanne T Blanchfield Richard J Bodnar Katja Boersma Jörgen Boivie Bruno Bonaz Chad S Boomershine David Borsook Frank Bosmans Didier Bouhassira Alexander Brack J Brederson Harald Breivik KC Brennan Graham Brett Eric E Brodie Julie Bruce Pablo Brumovsky Wolfgang F Buhre Samuel W Cadden Brian Cairns Paul A Cameron Paul Campbell Cecilia Canessa Ling Cao Daniel B Carr Eloise CJ Carr Linda J Carroll Ingolf Cascorbi C Cayla Christine Cedraschi Loris Chahl Christine Chambers David Champion Alexander Charlet Jun Chen DJ Chew I Choonara D Ciampi de Andrade Helen Cohen Lindsey L Cohen Luis Constandil A Converse Susan Coulson Rejean Couture Rebecca Craft Geert Crombez Giorgio Cruccu Joice M Cunha Salvatore Cuzzocrea Albert Dahan JBB Dahl JoAnne Dahl Ola Dale Radhouane Dallel Elizabeth J Dansie Monika Daubländer Mario Dauri Andrew N Davies Antoon De Laat Steven De Peuter Blake Dear Michael W Decker Ruth Defrin Jules Desmeules Pieter Dijkstra Diane Dixon Alexandra Doehring Sharron Dolan Jonathan Dostrovsky Patrick M Dougherty Gaetano Draisci Ruth Drdla-Schutting David Drover Peter Drummond Ronald Dubner Geoffrey B Duggan Kate M Dunn Elon Eisenberg Jens Ellrich Matthias A Engel Serdar Erdine Edzard Ernst Rosa Esteve Andrea Evers Elas Fabbretti
The purpose of this study was to isolate pathogens from the quarter milk of cows udders from diff... more The purpose of this study was to isolate pathogens from the quarter milk of cows udders from different dairy herds and to identify the different genera and species involved in mastitis. A total of 528 milk samples from clinical and subclinical mastitis quarters from five dairy herds of Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo State, Brazil, were included in this survey. Staphylococci was the largest group of pathogens isolated. Antibiotic resistance was found to be high between the major pathogens, especially to lincomycin (73.6-100.0%), penicillin (61.9-100.0%), novobiocin (64.2-100.0%), trimethoprim-sulphadyazin (71.0-100.0%). Multidrug resistance was a common event for the isolates.
This paper is written in celebration of the centenary of The Psychoanalytic Review and aims to br... more This paper is written in celebration of the centenary of The Psychoanalytic Review and aims to bring to life its entire history-100 years of publication. Almost as old as psychoanalysis itself, established by Jelliffe and White as a nonorthodox journal, and guided by all its subsequent editors, the Review has maintained its original mission: to serve as an open venue for all psychoanalytic perspectives, "a free forum for all." But the history of the Review is not without controversy. Freud made no original contributions to the Review. The paper unveils the Review's, rich history by looking briefly into the lives of some of its editors, the circumstances surrounding the creation of the Review (including pertinent correspondence between Freud and Brill and between Freud and Jelliffe), the years (with their engrossing politics) that followed the establishment of the Review until its merger with the journal Psychoanalysis (the official journal of NPAP), and the years that ...
Page 1. DISCUSSION: What is the Theoretical Yield in Studying the Psychoanalyst's Intentions... more Page 1. DISCUSSION: What is the Theoretical Yield in Studying the Psychoanalyst's Intentions? Alan J. Barnett The purpose of bringing together the present panel was to begin to approach the question of how analytic clinicians ...
The importance of the analyst’s creative involvement in the treatment process has grown with the ... more The importance of the analyst’s creative involvement in the treatment process has grown with the evolution of psychoanalysis. My intention in this issue is to bring together contributions on the analytic process from the common viewpoint of the analyst’s creative involvement that, when synthesized, may help generate additional theory on the analyst’s use of self. In considering the full range of what analysts do in treatment, explicitly and implicitly, to help promote progressive emotional communication, further thought is given here to the psychology of creativity in the analytic context. Arthur Robbins, in his article “Playing Along the Porous Edge of Chaos and Discipline: Pathways to the Creative Analytic Process,” develops a rich thesis on creative analytic dialogue by highlighting the personality dynamics and developmental cycle of the analyst as relevant to his or her creative motivation/intervention, giving the reader a remarkably effective experiential sense of the analyst’s oscillating affect states and involvements in the creative part of analysis. This nonlinear depiction of analytic process merges with a conceptual emphasis on the vital dimension of affective mirroring in examples from his psychoanalytic practice. Affective mirroring (providing patients in analytic therapy, and analysts in a supervisory group, with metaphorical understanding via affective resonance with their experience that may ultimately encompass interpretation) is importantly distinguished from empathy in promoting a loosening of the patient’s layers of protective adaptation. Michael Eigen, in his article “Distinction–Union Structure,” builds out the relevance and, indeed, centrality to treatment of the analyst’s creativity in holding and integrating opposite or multiple emotional tendencies expressed within oneself and the patient. Eigen recognizes what he calls distinction–union tendencies as internally experienced or perceived expressions of a more fundamental one-yet-many unity and structural framework in which differentiated movements of experience become hypothetically indistinguishable and unobservable. He discusses the religio-scientific-cultural background of this hypothetical single reality, including its presence in psychoanalytic theory, as an allusion to the creative core of the human condition, and as providing a conceptual basis for the analytic practitioner’s “generative presence.” Antonino Ferro, in his article, “Creativity in the Consulting Room: Factors of Fertility and Infertility,” views creativity in the analytic context as that which leads to “fertility in the analytic couple.” The loci of creativity in analysis, according to Ferro, all belong to the analytic couple’s dream functioning. Analytic efforts are directed to the ongoing development of the field. The analyst’s creative involvement in this development entails an ability to be “in unison” across a potential range of broadening oscillatory bands that allow for progressively saturated (metaphoric) interchanges/interpretations, in a setting of analytic receptivity and responsiveness
Recent formulations on the psychology of creativity in the analytic context, such as Albert Rothe... more Recent formulations on the psychology of creativity in the analytic context, such as Albert Rothenberg's “homospacial thinking,” Arnold Modell's “unconscious metaphoric thought,” and Thomas Ogden's “transformational thinking,” are discussed. These concepts enable previously unconnected experiences to be combined within the mind, while emphasizing interpersonal imaginative processes such as identification and empathic knowledge; the dual cognitive features of these formulations permit awareness of the complexity of feelings in oneself and others, essential for psychoanalytic creativity. Further, the articles in this issue are synthesized, highlighting the importance of the analyst making creative (new and valuable) use of his or her entire life experience, feelings, attitudes, and fantasies in treatment. From this dicussion, it is evident that the analyst's creative use of self should be more systematically incorporated into psychoanalytic theory of technique.
Wilco Achterberg A Ahmed Andrew H Ahn O Airaksinen Hamid I Akbarali Terence Allen Armando Almeida... more Wilco Achterberg A Ahmed Andrew H Ahn O Airaksinen Hamid I Akbarali Terence Allen Armando Almeida Anna Maria Aloisi Ananthila Anandacoomarasamy Lars L Andersen Martin Angst AV Apkarian C Argoff Pernilla Asenlof Ali Asghari Sadaf Ashraf Nadine Attal John Attia Shanaz Azad T Aziz Cathrine Baastrup Misha-Miroslav Backonja Jose M Baeyens D Bajic David Baker Federico Balague Giovanni Barbara Laurent Bardin Panos Barlas Alan Barnett M Barrot Daniel Barth Helene Bastuji Ulf Baumgärtner Lino Becerra Susanne Becker P Beek Annemerle Beerthuizen Gila Behzadi Inna Belfer Marie H Bement A Benham Dietmar Benke Michael I Bennett Jean-Jacques Benoliel Rafael Benoliel Odd-Geir Berge Michael Bernateck Enrica Bianchi Mauro Bianchi Joanne T Blanchfield Richard J Bodnar Katja Boersma Jörgen Boivie Bruno Bonaz Chad S Boomershine David Borsook Frank Bosmans Didier Bouhassira Alexander Brack J Brederson Harald Breivik KC Brennan Graham Brett Eric E Brodie Julie Bruce Pablo Brumovsky Wolfgang F Buhre Samuel W Cadden Brian Cairns Paul A Cameron Paul Campbell Cecilia Canessa Ling Cao Daniel B Carr Eloise CJ Carr Linda J Carroll Ingolf Cascorbi C Cayla Christine Cedraschi Loris Chahl Christine Chambers David Champion Alexander Charlet Jun Chen DJ Chew I Choonara D Ciampi de Andrade Helen Cohen Lindsey L Cohen Luis Constandil A Converse Susan Coulson Rejean Couture Rebecca Craft Geert Crombez Giorgio Cruccu Joice M Cunha Salvatore Cuzzocrea Albert Dahan JBB Dahl JoAnne Dahl Ola Dale Radhouane Dallel Elizabeth J Dansie Monika Daubländer Mario Dauri Andrew N Davies Antoon De Laat Steven De Peuter Blake Dear Michael W Decker Ruth Defrin Jules Desmeules Pieter Dijkstra Diane Dixon Alexandra Doehring Sharron Dolan Jonathan Dostrovsky Patrick M Dougherty Gaetano Draisci Ruth Drdla-Schutting David Drover Peter Drummond Ronald Dubner Geoffrey B Duggan Kate M Dunn Elon Eisenberg Jens Ellrich Matthias A Engel Serdar Erdine Edzard Ernst Rosa Esteve Andrea Evers Elas Fabbretti
The purpose of this study was to isolate pathogens from the quarter milk of cows udders from diff... more The purpose of this study was to isolate pathogens from the quarter milk of cows udders from different dairy herds and to identify the different genera and species involved in mastitis. A total of 528 milk samples from clinical and subclinical mastitis quarters from five dairy herds of Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo State, Brazil, were included in this survey. Staphylococci was the largest group of pathogens isolated. Antibiotic resistance was found to be high between the major pathogens, especially to lincomycin (73.6-100.0%), penicillin (61.9-100.0%), novobiocin (64.2-100.0%), trimethoprim-sulphadyazin (71.0-100.0%). Multidrug resistance was a common event for the isolates.
Uploads
Papers by Alan Barnett