Attachment, Play, and Authenticity: A Winnicott Primer
D.W. Winnicott is likely the most influential and evocative child therapist and theoretician who ever lived. His work provides the underpinning for much of the empirical and clinical enterprises regarding the developmental process over the past half-century. Using over 25 of his most thought-provoking—indeed provocative—conceptual and clinical writing as its base, Attachment, Play and Authenticity provides a systematic construction of his theorizing and then integrates it with his clinical work. The book begins with a description of Winnicott's unique ability to link Freudian drive theory with what we now call object relations theory by describing the newborn as a being with "predatory ideas" and the new mother as adaptively "preoccupied" with her baby. It then discusses the infant's innate need to "create" its mother; the dangers of a false compliance to an unreliable mother in order to survive; the dynamic dialectic between the baby's essential isolation and its need for others; and the capacity for hate as intrinsic to the humanization process. The role of play as the medium and hallmark of human potential, the creation of transitional phenomena to weather the aloneness of existence and the antisocial qualities inherent in the human condition are then all brought into play as pillars of his conceptual constructions. These themes are constantly interwoven throughout the book with an analysis of his clinical work, so that Winnicott as preeminent clinician sits alongside Winnicott as generative theorist.
1114800502
Attachment, Play, and Authenticity: A Winnicott Primer
D.W. Winnicott is likely the most influential and evocative child therapist and theoretician who ever lived. His work provides the underpinning for much of the empirical and clinical enterprises regarding the developmental process over the past half-century. Using over 25 of his most thought-provoking—indeed provocative—conceptual and clinical writing as its base, Attachment, Play and Authenticity provides a systematic construction of his theorizing and then integrates it with his clinical work. The book begins with a description of Winnicott's unique ability to link Freudian drive theory with what we now call object relations theory by describing the newborn as a being with "predatory ideas" and the new mother as adaptively "preoccupied" with her baby. It then discusses the infant's innate need to "create" its mother; the dangers of a false compliance to an unreliable mother in order to survive; the dynamic dialectic between the baby's essential isolation and its need for others; and the capacity for hate as intrinsic to the humanization process. The role of play as the medium and hallmark of human potential, the creation of transitional phenomena to weather the aloneness of existence and the antisocial qualities inherent in the human condition are then all brought into play as pillars of his conceptual constructions. These themes are constantly interwoven throughout the book with an analysis of his clinical work, so that Winnicott as preeminent clinician sits alongside Winnicott as generative theorist.
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Attachment, Play, and Authenticity: A Winnicott Primer

Attachment, Play, and Authenticity: A Winnicott Primer

by Steven Tuber
Attachment, Play, and Authenticity: A Winnicott Primer

Attachment, Play, and Authenticity: A Winnicott Primer

by Steven Tuber

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Overview

D.W. Winnicott is likely the most influential and evocative child therapist and theoretician who ever lived. His work provides the underpinning for much of the empirical and clinical enterprises regarding the developmental process over the past half-century. Using over 25 of his most thought-provoking—indeed provocative—conceptual and clinical writing as its base, Attachment, Play and Authenticity provides a systematic construction of his theorizing and then integrates it with his clinical work. The book begins with a description of Winnicott's unique ability to link Freudian drive theory with what we now call object relations theory by describing the newborn as a being with "predatory ideas" and the new mother as adaptively "preoccupied" with her baby. It then discusses the infant's innate need to "create" its mother; the dangers of a false compliance to an unreliable mother in order to survive; the dynamic dialectic between the baby's essential isolation and its need for others; and the capacity for hate as intrinsic to the humanization process. The role of play as the medium and hallmark of human potential, the creation of transitional phenomena to weather the aloneness of existence and the antisocial qualities inherent in the human condition are then all brought into play as pillars of his conceptual constructions. These themes are constantly interwoven throughout the book with an analysis of his clinical work, so that Winnicott as preeminent clinician sits alongside Winnicott as generative theorist.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781461627524
Publisher: Aronson, Jason Inc.
Publication date: 02/08/2008
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Steven Tuber, Ph.D., ABPP is professor of psychology and past director of the doctoral program in clinical psychology at the City University of New York at City College.

Table of Contents

Part 1 Preface
Part 2 Acknowledgements
Chapter 3 Overview
Chapter 4 Dialectical Meaning-Making in Infancy
Chapter 5 A Good Object Must be Found in Order to be Created
Chapter 6 The True Self and False Compliance
Chapter 7 We are Essentially Isolates, with the Capacity to be Alone
Chapter 8 Using Objects and the Capacity to Hate
Chapter 9 Integrating Theory with Therapy: The Case of Bob
Chapter 10 The Meaning and Power of Play
Chapter 11 The Mind, the Body, and the World of Transitional Phenomena
Chapter 12 Hate in the Countertransference
Chapter 13 The Antisocial Tendency
Chapter 14 The Aims of Psychoanalytic Treatment
Chapter 15 Winnicott as Therapist More than Theorist
Part 16 Bibliography
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