Psychoanalysis as a long term modality is inaccessible to the average South African. In this book the authors describe how psychoanalytically orientated or psychodynamic psychotherapy can be practiced as a short-term endeavour and applied to contemporary issues facing the country. Psychodynamic work is currently undertaken by clinical psychologists, therapists, clinicians, trainers, teachers, clinical supervisors, consultants and researchers working in university settings, state hospitals, community projects, private practice and research. The debates, clinical issues, therapeutic practice and nature of research covered in the book are widely representative of the work being done in the country. The need for shorter term therapy models and evidence-based interventions is as acute in global practice as it is locally. The lessons learned in South Africa have broader implications for international practitioners, and the authors stress the potential inherent in psychoanalytic theory and technique to tackle the complex problems faced in all places and settings characterised by increasing globalisation and dislocation. The book is structured in three main sections. Psychodynamic Psychotherapy in South Africa is aimed at local and international practitioners and students, while non-specialist readers will find the text informative and accessible.
Spis treści
Chapter 1 Naming and otherness: South African intersubjective psychoanalytic psychotherapy and the negotiation of racialised histories – Sally Swartz
Chapter 2 Raising the colour bar: Exploring issues of race, racism and racialised identities in the South African therapeutic context – Yvette Esprey
Chapter 3 Subjectivity and identity in South Africa today – Glenys Lobban
Chapter 4 Psychotherapy and disrupted attachment in the aftermath – Cora Smith
Chapter 5 Traumatic stress, internal and external: What do psychodynamic perspectives have to contribute? – Gill Eagle
Chapter 6 Unconscious meaning and magic: Comparing psychoanalysis and African indigenous healing – Gavin Ivey
Chapter 7 Intimate partner violence in post-apartheid South Africa: Psychoanalytic insights and dilemmas – Tina Sideris
Chapter 8 Serial murder and psychoanalysis in South Africa: Teasing out contextual issues amid intrapsychic phenomena in two case studies – Giada Del Fabbro
Chapter 9 Some psychoanalytic reflections on a project working with HIV orphans and their caregivers – Vanessa Hemp
Chapter 10 Reclaiming genealogy, memory and history: The psychodynamic potential for reparative therapy in contemporary South Africa – Michael O’Loughlin
Afterword: Glenys Lobban and Michael O’Loughlin
O autorze
Cora Smith is Adjunct Professor at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg and in private practice as a Clinical Psychologist.