A cutting-edge volume on the current state and future of psychoanalysis. This volume, based upon a conference held at the City University of New York in September 2005, brings together leading researchers and thinkers such as Peter Fonagy, Mary Target, Otto Kernberg, Glen Gabbard, Sidney Blatt, Donnel Stern, and Philip Bromberg. From diverse contemporary psychoanalytic perspectives, the authors consider the concept of mentalization and its operationalized version, reflective function, which Peter Fonagy and his colleagues have introduced over the past fifteen years. They explore the relation between these concepts and established psychoanalytic terms, such as representation and internalization, as well as the place of mentalization in psychoanalytic theory. The result is a lively and cutting-edge volume that could become instrumental in defining the future of psychoanalysis. This book will be of interest to a much broader audience as well--developmentalists, cognitive psychologists, neuroscientists, and philosophers--who will find it a fascinating springboard for interdisciplinary collaboration. Contributors: Anthony W. Bateman, Sidney Blatt, Philip M. Bromberg, Susan W. Coates, Diana Diamond, Peter Fonagy, Glen Gabbard, Karen Gilmore, Gyorgy Gergely, Elliot Jurist, Otto Kernberg, Kimberlyn Leary, Linda Mayes, Stephen Seligman, Arietta Slade, Miriam Steele, Donnel Stern, Mary Target, Zsolt Unoka. |