In Reclaiming Unlived Life, influential psychoanalyst Thomas Ogden
uses rich clinical examples to illustrate how different types of
thinking may promote or impede analytic work. With a unique style of
"creative reading," the book builds upon the work of Winnicott and Bion,
discussing the universality of unlived life and the ways unlived life
may be reclaimed in the analytic experience. The book examines the role
of intuition in analytic practice and the process of developing an
analytic style that is uniquely one's own.
Ogden deals with many forms of interplay of truth and psychic change,
the transformative effect of conscious and unconscious efforts to
confront the truth of experience and how psychoanalysts can understand
their own psychic evolution, as well as that of their patients.
Reclaiming Unlived Life sets out a new way that analysts can
understand and use notions of truth in their clinical work and in their
reading of the work of Kafka and Borges.
Reclaiming Unlived Life: Experiences in Psychoanalysis will appeal to
psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists, as well as
postgraduate students and anybody interested in the literature of
psychoanalysis.