This volume consists of a series of essays inspired by Freud's paper on Jensen's novel Gradiva - she who steps along. In the story a young archaeologist Norbert Hanold suffers from delusions but is able to unravel the mysteries of his emotional life and mind with the aid of a woman who does not challenge these delusions but rather steps along with Hanold gradually helping him to disentangle truth from fantasy through what Freud called cure by love. Gradiva originally felt to be the source of Hanold's malady eventually becomes the agent of its resolution and of his return to health. This extraordinary tale formed the basis for the author's concept of taking the transference. Through clinical vignettes various aspects of psychoanalytic technique - useful from the first encounter between patient and analyst and throughout the process of the development of mind to termination - are illustrated in detail. | Psychoanalytic Technique and Theory Taking the Transference
This volume consists of a series of essays inspired by Freud's paper on Jensen's novel Gradiva - she who steps along. In the story a young archaeologist Norbert Hanold suffers from delusions but is able to unravel the mysteries of his emotional life and mind with the aid of a woman who does not challenge these delusions but rather steps along with Hanold gradually helping him to disentangle truth from fantasy through what Freud called cure by love. Gradiva originally felt to be the source of Hanold's malady eventually becomes the agent of its resolution and of his return to health. This extraordinary tale formed the basis for the author's concept of taking the transference. Through clinical vignettes various aspects of psychoanalytic technique - useful from the first encounter between patient and analyst and throughout the process of the development of mind to termination - are illustrated in detail. | Psychoanalytic Technique and Theory Taking the Transference
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