Counter-transference: an essential tool?
In collaboration with Le Carnet PsyIntroduction
Countertransference has been recognized as an indispensable aspect of analytic and psychotherapeutic technique. It presupposes the existence of personal involvement and participation on the part of the analyst or therapist. But if this notion is widely accepted, questions remain: how to handle counter-transference? How can we identify its various manifestations if they are deemed unconscious? How can it be used for the benefit of clinical practice, while avoiding the drifts of an overly personalized approach to therapy that would be dictated by the analyst himself?
Author
Paul Denis is a child psychiatrist, psychoanalyst and member of the Société Psychanalytique de Paris. He edited the Revue française de Psychanalyse from 1996 to 2004 and was a long-time contributor to the journal La psychiatrie de l'enfant. He is the author of several books, in particular Les phobies and Le narcissisme in the Que sais-je? collection at PUF.
Podcast
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