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E-raamat: Researching the Unconscious: Principles of Psychoanalytic Method

Edited by (University of East London, UK)
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Researching the Unconscious provides an exposition of key issues in the philosophy and methods of the social sciences that are relevant to psychoanalysis, both as a clinical practice and as a human science. These include the debates initiated by Thomas Kuhn’s theory of scientific revolutions, the actor-network theory of Bruno Latour, the ideas of philosophical realism, distinctions between meaningful and causal explanation, and the relevance of complexity theory and part–whole analysis to psychoanalysis. The book goes on to discuss specific forms and methods of psychoanalytical research, including the role of case studies, of outcome research, and of grounded theory as a key methodological resource, of which it provides a detailed example. The book concludes by outlining principles and methods for psychoanalytic research in the wider contexts of infant observational studies, society, and culture. Michael Rustin provides a unifying account of the methodological principles that underlie the generation of knowledge in psychoanalysis, in the light of recent developments in the philosophy and sociology of science. In doing so, it provides a coherent rationale for psychoanalytic investigation, which will be of value to those pursuing research in this field.Researching the Unconscious is unusual in its being based both on a deep understanding of and respect for psychoanalytical clinical practice and on its author’s wider knowledge of the philosophy and sociology of science. It is unique in its comprehensive approach to the principles of psychoanalytic research.

Arvustused

'How can psychoanalysis be a research activity when its task is not a generalizing one, but a particularizing one, that is, to impart the nuance and convey complexity? Michael Rustin has some fascinating and learned answers to this question. He shows how psychoanalysis does generate knowledge and should respect its own methods of doing so. Read him and learn!'-Anne Alvarez, PhD, MACP, Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychotherapist.

'Michael Rustin is an outstanding contributor to the development of psychoanalytic studies, and author of several works of seminal importance in British sociology. In this lucid and rational book, he distils his thinking from many years of teaching and scholarship to offer a persuasive defence of psychoanalysis as a rational and progressive social science of huge cultural significance. The book is crucial reading for everyone interested in the standing of psychoanalysis as a human science.'-Stephen Frosh, Department of Psychosocial Studies, Birkbeck, University of London, UK

'This is an impressive work. Rustin is uniquely equipped to show how methods of research consistent with psychoanalytic approaches can produce an objective body of knowledge. His book continues the remarkable tradition of Jaspers and Ricoeur. It provides a great deal of what researchers and mental health therapists will need to meet the challenges of the future'-David Taylor, psychoanalyst and Visiting Professor, UCL Psychoanalysis Unit, UK

Series Editors' Preface ix
Acknowledgements xii
Preface xiii
1 Introduction
1(12)
2 Psychoanalysis as a scientific paradigm
13(17)
3 The consulting room as the psychoanalytic laboratory
30(17)
4 Philosophical realism and its relevance
47(13)
5 Meanings and causes in psychoanalytic explanation
60(17)
6 On classification
77(18)
7 Case-study methods in psychoanalysis
95(16)
8 Parts and wholes: different kinds of explanation
111(13)
9 Complexity theory and psychoanalysis
124(13)
10 Clinical facts
137(19)
11 Grounded theory in psychoanalysis and child psychotherapy
156(21)
12 Grounded theory in child psychotherapy: an example
177(41)
13 Outcome studies
218(19)
14 Observational research methods
237(14)
15 Socio-psychoanalytic research
251(17)
16 Psychoanalytic cultural methods
268(19)
References 287(22)
Index 309
Michael Rustin is a Professor of Sociology at the University of East London, UK. He has been a significant contributor to psychoanalytic debates over many years and is the author and editor of many books, including The Good Society and the Inner World (1991), Reason and Unreason (2001), and, with Margaret Rustin, Mirror to Nature (2002) and Reading Klein (2017). He has played a major role in the development of postgraduate and doctoral research at the Tavistock Clinic. He is an Associate of the British Psychoanalytical Society.