2010
DOI: 10.1080/00107530.2010.10746052
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Tales of the Therapist's Passion on the Screen

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1

Citation Types

0
2
0

Year Published

2016
2016
2017
2017

Publication Types

Select...
2

Relationship

1
1

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
references
References 1 publication
0
2
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Green (1986) in addressing passion talked about “mad mental functioning,” and Aulagnier (1994) referred to passion as “psychotic potential” (p. 228). Passion in sexual love is already an expression of the crossing of boundaries of the self (Tylim, 2010).…”
Section: Transference Passion: An Asymmetric Relationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Green (1986) in addressing passion talked about “mad mental functioning,” and Aulagnier (1994) referred to passion as “psychotic potential” (p. 228). Passion in sexual love is already an expression of the crossing of boundaries of the self (Tylim, 2010).…”
Section: Transference Passion: An Asymmetric Relationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some of the shared preoccupations these papers deal with are: memory, history, and reconstruction; experiences of loss, mental growth, and creativity; facts linked with the passage of time-childhood, youth, maturity, and old age, as well as the inevitability of death; perception, desire, pleasure, and love; intimacy, identity, individuality, and difference; dialectics between inside/outside, language/action, individual/society, and reality/ illusion; the experience of listening, reading, or beholding; the value of thinking, relating, and helping; the consequences of new technologies for our ways of thinking and relating; and the complexities of violence, destructiveness, fundamentalism, and trauma. (See Abella 2008Abella , 2010Anderson 2009;Ashur 2009;Baudry 2001;Blum 2001;Civitarese 2010;Diena 2009;Frosch 2009;Goldstein 1975;Golinelli 2003;Jones 1999;Mandelbaum 2011;Minerbo 2008;Paul 2011;Petrella 2008;Poland 2003;Sabbadini 2009Sabbadini , 2011Schaub 2008;Schiller 2008;Schwartz 2009;Szajnberg 2010;Tylim 2010;and West-Leuer 2009. ) The style adopted by these papers comes nearer to what we usually call a dialogue: listening to the way others tackle the same questions with which we ourselves are dealing; confronting models and exploring different answers; receiving/learning instead of only giving/teaching; trying not to demonstrate but to listen to the way that others use our suggestions and their echoes on our own thinking; putting to work our constructs and questioning our ideas; accepting that we may be destabilized in our certainties and being willing to deconstruct our truths in order to allow them to grow and be enriched.…”
Section: A More Unsaturated Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%