A Psychoanalytic Exploration On Sameness and Otherness

Dec 24, 2019
Categories:
Edited By Anne-Marie Schlösser

Description

In dialogue with the most famous myth for the origin of different languages – The Tower of Babel – A Psychoanalytic Exploration on Sameness and Otherness: Beyond Babel? provides a series of timely reflections on the themes of sameness and otherness from a contemporary psychoanalytic perspective. How are we dealing with communication and its difficulties, the confusion of tongues and loss of common ground within a European context today? Can we move beyond Babel?

Confusion and feared loss of shared values and identity are a major part of the daily work of psychoanalytic psychotherapists. Bringing together an international range psychoanalytic practitioners and researchers, the book is divided into six parts and covers an array of resonant topics, including: language and translation; cultural identity; families and children; the cyber world; the psychotherapeutic process; and migration. Whereas the quest for unity, which underpins the myth of Babel, leads to mystification, simplification, and the exclusion of people or things, multilingual communities necessitate mutual understanding through dialogue. This book examines those factors that further or threaten communication, aiming not to reduce, but to gain complexity. It suggests that diversification enriches communication and that, by relating to others, we can create something new.

As opposed to cultural and linguistic homogeneity, Babel is not only a metaphor for mangled communication, alienation, and distraction, it is also about the acceptance or rejection of differences between self and other. This book will be of great interest to psychoanalytic psychotherapists and researchers from a wide variety of backgrounds.

Table of Contents

Part One: Translating, Understanding and Language Confusion

Chapter 1. Inside Babel
Anna Ursula Dreher

Chapter 2. The Gift of Babel
Jan Philipp Reemtsma

Chapter 3. Longing for Connection
Antje v. Boettiche

Part Two: Cultural Identity and Accepting Otherness

Chapter 4. What Arab and Jewish School Counsellors Remember from Within-Group Diversity in Academia and How it Affects their Work
Ariela Bairey Ben Ishay and Lori Greenberger

Chapter 5. Women Today: When Equality Turns into a Trap
Daniela Lucarelli and Gabriela Tavazza

Part Three: Families and Children at Risk

Chapter 6. Psychoanalytic Family Therapy of Anorexia Nervosa
Guenter Reich and Antje von Boetticher

Chapter 7. Hello/Goodbye New Families! Group Work with Looked After Siblings
Heather Lee Messner and Elizabeth Stevenson

Chapter 8. The Creation of Identity: The Way to Gender Distinction and Identity in the Family
Anne Loncan

Chapter 9. Misunderstanding and Confusion: Educational and Psychotherapeutic Work in a Kindergarten. An Outreach Project
Christiane Ludwig-Koerner

Part Four: Cyber: New Forms of Communication

Chapter 10. Zoom, Skype, the Uncanny Third Ones and Psychotherapy
Irmgard Dettbarn

Chapter 11. Like or Dislike: Questions and Challenges in the Consulting Room of a “Society 2.0”
Angelo Bonaminio, Domenico Scaringi, and Giusy Spagna

Part Five: Babel in Psychotherapy

Chapter 12. Is There a Thing Like “Psychoanalytic Identity”? Towards a Theory of Individualized Interaction in Our Sessions
Michael B. Buchholz

Chapter 13. Is Psychoanalysis in a State of “Babylonian Confusion”?
Heinrich Deserno

Chapter 14. Linguistic Confusion in the Psychoanalytic Process: About Understanding and Communication
Anne Laimboeck

Chapter 15. “To Hear Significance is to Translate” (George Steiner). Psychoanalytic Considerations about Capabilities and Limitations of Translation Processes in Literary and Clinical Work
Angela Mauss-Hanke

Chapter 16. Sameness and Otherness in a Group Supervision Experience
Annarita D’Uva, Loreta Negro, Maria Carmela Schiavone, Alessia Serra, and Ludovica Grassi

Chapter 17. Psychic Deadness in the Consulting Room: The Role of Vitalizing Supervision
Effie Layou-Lignos and Vassiliki Vassilopoulou

Chapter 18. Lost and Gained in Translation: Language Choice, Triangulation and Transference with Bilingual Patients
Annette Byford

Part Six: Migration

Chapter 19. “So They Walked Behind Their Words”: Language and Sense of Self in the Process of Migration
Gisela Zeller-Steinbrich

Chapter 20. Quest for Identity: Borderland Adolescents with Migration Background
Annette Streeck-Fischer

Chapter 21. An Unequal Matrix: Western Germans, Eastern Germans, Migrants
Jens Preil

Chapter 22. Accepting Otherness to Find Sameness: When a Jewish Child Realizes that the Therapist is an Arab
Caesar Hakim

Editors Biography

Anne-Marie Schlösser is a psychologist and training and supervising analyst with the IPA, DPG, and DGPT, working in private practice after many years at the Department of Medical Psychology at the University of Goettingen. She is a member of German committees for the development of psychotherapy, an expert for psychoanalytic treatment in the German Health Services, past president of the DGPT and EFPP, and has offered training in psychoanalytic psychotherapy in Shanghai. She is Editor-in-Chief of the EFPP Book Series published by Routledge.

Reviews

“Rarely have I read a collection of such stimulating and suggestive theoretical and clinical essays by a range of scholars and practitioners of contemporary psychoanalytical psychotherapy for various mental illnesses understood in the context of ‘dis-eases’. Drawing on the work of several traditional and modern schools of thought, these authors consider the constraints and restraints of body, mind, and society in the context of what Group Analysts call the ‘tripartite matrix’, with its emphasis on interpersonal relations, values and norms, and perhaps above all patterns of communication, both verbal and non-verbal. I was profoundly moved to realise the extent of the growth and development of a European federation of organisations, colleagues, languages and ideas, which augurs well for our continuing cooperation in the service of the well-being of our patients and clients, even in adverse political and economic conditions.”
–Earl Hopper, PhD, Mem.Inst.GA. DFAGPA, psychoanalyst, group analyst and organisational consultant in private practice in London

“The special strenght of this innovative book arisis exactly from the connection between its topic and its intrinsic creativity: open to an international vision, this text shows a combination of curiosity in exploration and freedom from any official academic attitude, while going to depth into unusual psychoanalytic and widely cultural areas. I recommend A Psychoanalytic Exploration on Sameness and Otherness both as a fascinating read and as a potential educational instrument for psychologists, psychotherapysts and psychoanalysts.”
–Stefano Bolognini, IPA Past President

Purchase Link

error: Content is protected !!