Written by one of the world's renowned Bionian Field Theory scholars,
this foundational volume provides a thorough introduction to all facets
of psychoanalytic field theory, one of the most lively and original
currents of thought in contemporary psychoanalysis, to offer new answers
to age-old questions around how psychic change occurs.
With clinical examples to illuminate key themes of therapeutic
effectiveness, current controversies, and future developments, the book
presents a radically intersubjective view of the analytic process that
focuses on the plane of unconscious communication common to both analyst
and patient, moving beyond the I/you division to access the shared
substance of the psyche. It centers the unconscious not as a hellish
region of the psyche but as an important function of the personality
that gives meaning to emotional experience.
Offering clear expositions of complex concepts and linking to more
detailed sources of information, this book is important reading for all
clinicians, trainees, and students interested in contemporary
psychoanalysis.