Building on their long-lasting scientific partnership, Civitarese and
Ferro offer an array of thought-provoking writings bolstered by
extensive clinical material, attesting to their shared interpretation of
psychoanalysis not only as a treatment for psychic suffering but also as
inherently pleasurable and vitalizing.
In chapters that reflect inclinations, fantasies and obsessions that are
both shared and personal, and by engaging with topics various enough to
include dreams, ethics, emotions and aesthetics, the authors demonstrate
how the practice of psychoanalysis might no longer be an insidiously
moralistic or ideological exercise but rather a practice aimed at
opening up and liberating the mind. By providing detailed engagement
with the work of Bion and Ogden, as well as insights from their own
substantial expertise, the authors explore how the synonymous concepts
of playing and vitality can meaningfully inform and change clinical
psychoanalytic practice.
With rich clinical material and a strong foundation in established
theory, this book will appeal to psychoanalysts, psychoanalytic
therapists and postgraduate students hoping to make more room in the
psychoanalytic lexicon for words like pleasure, dreaming, creativity,
hospitality and growth.