Details

The Psychoanalysis of Symptoms


The Psychoanalysis of Symptoms



von: Henry Kellerman

53,49 €

Verlag: Springer
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 23.10.2007
ISBN/EAN: 9780387722481
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 169

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Beschreibungen

<P>In this book, Dr. Henry Kellerman presents a set of principles (psychological/psychoanalytic axioms) which underpin the curing of psychological/emotional symptoms through the use of four terms that comprise a psychological equation. Each of these terms is spelled-out, and then throughout the book, specific symptoms are identified, and in a step-by-step display, the reader can follow the cure of the symptom through the use of this new discovery.</P>
Prevailing wisdom in the clinical arena has had it that each psychological sy- tom is a separate lock requiring its correspondingly unique key. Thus, it has been thought with respect to symptoms, that there are an infinite number of locks and a correspondingly infinite number of keys. Further, the psychoanalytic sense of it is that each symptom needs to be assessed, analyzed, and approached with reference to the unique experience of the patient and the patient’s history; among other f- tors, also in terms of psychosexual conflict, and ego-strength. Given this position, it also has been felt that no single procedure, or code could be developed to address all symptoms of all patients as though, as an analogy, one lock and one key could apply to every symptom. In this sense, there has been scarcely any attempt to derive a universal code that would address all symptoms with respect to the formation and structure of the symptom, regardless of the patient’s particular experience and psychological h- tory. In this volume, however, with only a few qualifications, I will present a s- gle universal code to unlock any and all specifically defined psychological symptoms. I will present a system and procedure–a blueprint–with which to do it. One key. Further, this procedure will be guided entirely by a set of propositions and axioms regarding each step in the unlocking of any symptom.
History of Symptom Psychology.- Underpinnings of the Symptom-Code.- The Symptom-Code and Its Application.- On Wishes, Symptoms, and Withdrawal.- Bottles Under the Bed: A Case of Compulsion.- Holes: A Case of Body Delusion.- Symptoms Based Upon Feelings of Rejection: Strangling, Sweats, and Death.- Gazing at Corpses: A Case of Morbid Compulsion.- Sin of the Priest: A Case of Obsession.- Ingenious Regression: A Case of Hallucination.- Panic on the Bridge: A Case of Selective Agoraphobia.- 'I Can Hardly Move': A Case of a Three-Day Migraine.- Doubled Over: A Case of Displaced Phallic Obsession.- The Psychology of Blushing: Cases in the Involuntary Disclosure of Success Wishes.- 'No Writing!': A Case of Delusional Self-Incrimination.- 'I’m Not Going To Work Today': A Case of Severe Agoraphobia.- Chaos: A Case of Compulsive Collecting and Hoarding.- Not Thin Enough!: A Case of Anorexia.- Dissociative Identity Disorder: A Case of Split Personality.- An Asperger Mind: An Examination of the Case of Nobelian John Forbes Nash, Jr.- Acting Out: The First Symptom and the Primacy of Anger or Sex.- Symptoms versus Character Traits: Accessible versus Inaccessible Symptoms.- The Metamorphosis of Symptoms: The Domain of Wishes and the Domain of Traits.- References.
<P>Henry Kellerman, Ph.D. is training analyst and senior supervisor at the Postgraduate Center for Mental Health in New York City.&nbsp; He is the author and editor of numerous works and scientific papers and was the editor of the Columbia University book series Personality, Psychopathology, and Psychotherapy: Theoretical and Clinical Perspectives. A former National Institute of Mental Health Fellow, Dr. Kellerman is also a fellow of the American Psychological Association and the American Group Psychotherapy Association.&nbsp; He maintains a private psychoanalytic practice in New York City.</P>
<P>Anthony Burry, Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst and Diplomate at the American Board of Assessment Psychology.&nbsp; He was formerly the Director of Psychology Internship training, supervisor, and faculty member at the Postgraduate Center of Mental Health.&nbsp; Dr. Burry was also Director of Psychological Evaluation at Comprehensive Psychological Services, and a Senior Supervisor of school mental health programs at the Brooklyn Center for Psychotherapy.&nbsp; He maintains a private practice in psychotherapy and psychodiagnostic testing in New York City.</P>
<P>"In this volume, Dr. Henry Kellerman has constructed a lens through which the inner working of pscyhological symptoms can be clearly seen.&nbsp; Along with this he has proposed a code for unraveling such symptoms.&nbsp; He then carefully applies this symptom-code, in detail, to a wide variety of symptoms.&nbsp; This is an important psychoanalytic work; and elegant conception, elegantly presented." -- Harry Sands, Ph.D., Founder and Executive Editor, <EM>Journal of Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis</EM>; and Former President, New York State Psychological Association</P>
<P>"In a compelling theoretical synthesis, Dr. Kellerman proposes that the only phenomenon in psychoanalysis and psychotherapy subject to cure is the patient's psychological symptom.&nbsp; All else is helping the patient struggle better.&nbsp; An X-ray of the symptom is developed and a method to efficiently penetrate the symptom is demonstrated. The important contribution here is that Kellerman has distilled the four basic elements that comprise a symptom-code -- a universal key that unlocks symptoms.&nbsp; I believe this work is a tour de force, and constitutes a classic advance psychoanalytic understanding." -- Vincenzo Conigliaro, M.D., Dean and Medical Director, Training Institute for Mental Health</P>
<P>"Dr. Kellerman introduces a system called the symptom-code that enables clinicians to understand and treate a wide variety of debilitating symptoms.&nbsp; Much of Dr. Kellerman's case material reads like a detective story in which the symptom-code is applied and the meaning of the symptom becomes readily apparent.&nbsp; The reader will find these cases fascinating and the explanations given by Dr. Kellerman quite convincing." -- Mary Beth M. Cresci, Past President, Section of Psychologist/Psychoanalyst Practitioners</P>
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<P>In analysis, a particular symptom may be cured as a by-product of therapy, with neither the therapist nor the client knowing how the cure came about. But what if the therapist were armed with an analytically sound method, a "master key" for curing nearly all symptoms, regardless of client history?</P>
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<P>In <EM>The Psychoanalysis of Symptoms</EM>, Henry Kellerman introduces the symptom-code, a powerful blueprint for understanding and eliminating a wide variety of clients’ psychological and emotional symptoms. This time-efficient method synthesizes knowledge of symptoms found throughout the psychiatric literature, empowering both analyst and client to larger underlying conflicts. The author demonstrates the procedure in step-by-step detail, with case examples that distinguish between curable symptoms and more ego-entrenched forms that can be diminished but not completely erased. </P>
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<P>Included in this volume:</P>
<UL>
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<LI>The symptom-code: theoretical, scientific, and clinical contexts.</LI>
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<LI>Symptom-code procedures applied at different stages of symptom development.</LI>
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<LI>Accessible symptoms: the method used in treating obsessions, intrusive thoughts, migraines, compulsions, and agoraphobia.</LI>
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<LI>Treatment-resistant symptoms: uses of the method in cases of anorexia, hoarding, dissociative disorder, and more.</LI>
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<LI>Is it a symptom or a character trait? Personality issues and the symptom-code.</LI>
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<LI>The migration of symptoms in the psyche.</LI>
<P></P></UL>
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<P>In presenting a symptom-cure methodology that is effective, lasting, and brief, <EM>The Psychoanalysis of Symptoms</EM> offers analysts a straighter path on each client’s unique journey. </P>
<p>Presents a “map” so that the reader can follow the cure-steps, and includes numerous cases with respect to this opportunity of tracing the cure of the symptom</p><p>Identifies two categories of symptoms: those that can be cured through the talking method; and, those that need medication along with the talking method in order to be cured</p><p>Offers criteria that enable a distinction to be made regarding any symptom -- as to whether the symptom is intractable and needs medication, or not</p><p>Provides the reader a perspective of the history of symptom psychology, leading to this particular contribution regarding the discovery of the infrastructure of symptoms and their cure</p><p>Illustrates through examples and discussion why some symptoms offer relief of tension while others increase tension</p>