The construct of the therapeutic alliance is approached from the psychoanalytic tradition by reference to the ideas of Freud, Sterba, Zetzel, Greenson, and Luborsky. The transtheoretical approaches posited by Bordin and Gaston are also presented and the relation of alliance to the transference is discussed. The empirical evidence as to the role of the alliance in psychodynamically oriented psychotherapy is presented, and the construct is operationally defined by means of the major psychometric instruments. Factors that foster the development of strong alliances (patient and therapist factors), as well as those that hinder or result in its rupture are discussed in detail. The differential association of alliance to outcome depending on who measures the alliance
This paper introduces the concept of massive gender trauma, a clinical syndrome arising at the onerous intersection of the misgendering of transgender patients and the subjective, anguished experience of the natal body. Analysts have become increasingly aware in recent years of the complex interactions between psyche, soma, and culture. Consequently, the field is increasingly hospitable to considering the psychic risks inherent in misgendering. However, patients' body dysphoria is often left unaddressed even by analysts who seek to work within their analysands' gendered experience. Through a detailed, in-depth account of work with a five-year-old trans girl (female-identified, male-bodied), the developmental implications of the natal body's not becoming sufficiently mentalized in the course of treatment are tracked and explored. Attention to unconscious fantasy and its transformations shows the importance of helping transgender patients whose bodies are a source of suffering to be able to psychically represent their pain as a critical step in the process of a psychologically healthy transition.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.