The thawing of the Cold War has brought new concerns over the nature of European security to the fore and uncovered major differences in the approaches of individual states to changed circumstances. This book clarifies the options for a new European security order and contribute to the growing debate. It adopts a medium-term analytical approach and uses a three-tier format, covering the nature and structure of security and the security implications of Europe's resurgent nationalism; security strategy, with particular reference to the NATO perspective and to the European Community; and the distinctive security concerns of individual states. It looks at both Eastern and Western Europe and at the Soviet Union and it analyses the role of the United States in European security.The thawing of the Cold War has brought new concerns over the nature of European security to the fore and uncovered major differences in the approaches of individual states to changed circumstances.
Table of Contents:
Part I: Psychoanalysis and Semiotics. Psychoanalysis and Nonverbal Communication. Protolinguistic Phenomena in Psychoanalysis. The Primitive Psyche, Communication, and the Language of the Body. Speech as Manipulation. Epigenesis, Regression, and the Problem of Consciousness. Part II: On the Analytic Dialogue. Treatment as the Development of a Shared Language. Channels of Communication and the Analytic Setup. Analytic Interventions: The Question of Form. Empathy, New Beginnings, and Analytic Cure. More on the Affectivity of the Analyst. On Countertransference and Projective Identification, and the Question of Intersubjectivity. Part III: Intrapsychic Communication. The Self as True or False, Crazy or Sane. Working Through as Metaphor for Treatment Modality. On Fastball Pitching, Astronomical Clocks, and Self-Cognition.
About the Author :
John E. Gedo, M.D., retired in 1990 as Training and Supervising Analyst, Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis. He is the author of numerous books for Analytic Press, including The Biology of Clinical Encounters (1991) and The Mind in Disorder (1998).
Review :
"The Languages of Psychoanalysis is the culmination of Gedo's many splendid theoretical contributions that aim at integrating contemporary developments within psychoanalysis with the yield from all the sciences that impinge on it and enrich it. His reconsideration of virtually every aspect of analysis, in particular the variety of 'voices' and affective experiences of analysands, enables him to provide a theoretical basis for both the psychology and the biology of motivation. Thus, he gives us an outline of, and an introduction to, a future psychoanalysis that is open to all scientific, semantic, poetic, musical, and any number of other possible sources and insights, while remaining true to its biological roots."
- Henry Krystal, M.D., Michigan Psychoanalytic Institute
"In this remarkable volume, Gedo takes us on a whirlwind guided tour into the future of psychoanalysis. It is a future where clinical psychoanalysis draws its sustenance from the several psychologies that underlie it rather than rusty metapsychology and where artificial dichotomies (such as mind-brain) collapse under the force of rigorous scientific thinking. He depicts a clinical world where evidence truly counts toward assessing value, where data drive theories rather than vice-versa, and where analysands are provided with treatment rather than ideology. His hierarchical model bridged clinical psychoanalysis with contemporary brain, cognitive, and developmental psychologies. This future is Gedo's fervent wish, and the outlining of its possibilities is his signal contribution. His ambitious intensity on behalf of his discipline further stamps The Languages of Psychoanalysis as critically significant for contemporary psychoanalysis."
- Arnold Wilson, Ph.D., Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research