Acknowledgements |
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xi | |
About The Editors and Contributors |
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xiii | |
Series Editors' foreword |
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xix | |
Introduction |
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xxi | |
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Introduction |
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xxiii | |
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Prologue: Fairbairn the writer |
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xxxi | |
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3 | (2) |
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Chapter One From instinct to self: the evolution and implications of W. R. D. Fairbairn's theory of object relations |
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5 | (22) |
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Ellinor Fairbairn Birtles |
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Chapter Two From Oedipus to Antigone: Hegelian themes in Fairbairn |
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27 | (14) |
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Chapter Three Making Fairbairn's psychoanalysis thinkable: Henry Drummond's natural laws of the spiritual world |
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41 | (8) |
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Chapter Four Splitting in the history of psychoanalysis: from Janet and Freud to Fairbairn, passing through Ferenczi and Suttie |
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49 | (10) |
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Chapter Five Fairbairn, Suttie, and Macmurray---an essay |
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59 | (10) |
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Chapter Six Religion in the life and work of W. R. D. Fairbairn |
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69 | (18) |
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Chapter Seven Fairbairn and homosexuality: sex versus conscience |
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87 | (14) |
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Chapter Eight Fairbairn in Argentina: the "Fairbairn Space" in the Argentine Psychoanalytic Association (APA) |
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101 | (14) |
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Chapter Nine Some comments about Ronald Fairbairn's impact today |
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115 | (12) |
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127 | (4) |
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Chapter Ten Why read Fairbairn? |
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131 | (16) |
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Chapter Eleven On the origin of internal objects in the works of Fairbairn and Klein and the possible therapeutic consequences |
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147 | (14) |
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Chapter Twelve Fairbairn: Oedipus reconfigured by trauma |
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161 | (14) |
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Eleanore M. Armstrong-Perlman |
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Chapter Thirteen Sitting with marital tensions: the work of Henry Dicks in applying Fairbairn's ideas to couple relationships |
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175 | (10) |
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Chapter Fourteen W. R. D. Fairbairn's contribution to the study of personality disorders |
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185 | (12) |
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Chapter Fifteen Fairbairn: abuse, trauma, and multiplicity |
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197 | (12) |
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Chapter Sixteen Fairbairn and multiple personality |
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209 | (14) |
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Chapter Seventeen Fairbairn and "emptiness pathology" |
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223 | (14) |
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Chapter Eighteen Fairbairn's unique contributions to dream interpretation |
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237 | (12) |
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Chapter Nineteen The analyst as good object: a Fairbairnian perspective |
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249 | (14) |
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Chapter Twenty Expanding Fairbairn's reach |
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263 | (14) |
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277 | (4) |
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Chapter Twenty-One The contribution of W. R. D. Fairbairn (1889--1965) to psychoanalytic theory and practice |
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281 | (14) |
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Chapter Twenty-Two John Padel's contribution to an understanding of Fairbairn's object relations theory |
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295 | (14) |
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Chapter Twenty-Three Fairbairn elaborated: Guntrip and the psychoanalytic romantic model |
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309 | (14) |
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Chapter Twenty-Four From Fairbairn to Winnicott |
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323 | (10) |
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Chapter Twenty-Five Fairbairn and Ferenczi |
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333 | (10) |
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Chapter Twenty-Six Mitchell reading Fairbairn |
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343 | (12) |
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Chapter Twenty-Seven Fairbairn's influence on Stephen Mitchell's theoretical and clinical work |
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355 | (10) |
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Chapter Twenty-Eight Self and society, trauma and the link |
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365 | (14) |
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Chapter Twenty-Nine Fairbairn and Pichon-Riviere: object relations, link, and group |
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379 | (12) |
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Chapter Thirty The "intuitive position" and its relationship to creativity, science, and art in Fairbairn's work |
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391 | (6) |
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Chapter Thirty-One Revising Fairbairn's structural theory |
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397 | (14) |
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Chapter Thirty-Two Fairbairn's accomplishment is good science |
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411 | (6) |
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Chapter Thirty-Three Fairbairn and partitive conceptions of mind |
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417 | (14) |
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Chapter Thirty-Four Fairbairn and the philosophy of intersubjectivity |
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431 | (14) |
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445 | (2) |
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Chapter Thirty-Five Fair play: a restitution of Fairbairn's forgotten role in the historical drama of art and psychoanalysis |
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447 | (14) |
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Chapter Thirty-Six Viewing Camus's The Stranger from the perspective of W. R. D. Fairbairn's object relations |
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461 | (10) |
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Chapter Thirty-Seven The family is the first social group, followed by the clan, tribe, and nation |
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471 | (12) |
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Chapter Thirty-Eight Fairbairn's object relations theory and social work in child welfare |
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483 | (14) |
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Envoi |
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497 | (2) |
Index |
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499 | |