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The Social Work Psychoanalyst's Casebook: Clinical Voices in Honor of Jean Sanville
Contributor(s): Edward, Joyce (Editor), Rose, Elaine (Editor)
ISBN: 0881632562     ISBN-13: 9780881632569
Publisher: Routledge
OUR PRICE:   $65.50  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: November 1999
Qty:
Annotation: This tribute to Jean Sanville, outstanding clinical social work psychoanalyst, demonstrates what social work analysts can contribute to their patients, to fellow analysts from other disciplines, as well as to psychoanalysis itself. Dr. Sanville's 80th birthday comes at a time when opportunities for social workers to become psychoanalysts are beginning to expand. This is the first book to explore the contributions of this group in detail, thus making it unique.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Social Work
- Psychology | Movements - Psychoanalysis
- Psychology | Applied Psychology
Dewey: 384.544
LCCN: 99032594
Physical Information: 0.91" H x 6.36" W x 9.36" (1.09 lbs) 256 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

The Social Work Psychoanalyst's Casebook begins with an interview with Dr. Sanville, who reflects on her evolution as a social work analyst, theoretician, writer, teacher, and leader. These reminiscences are followed by accounts of nine analytic treatments, each of which offers an unusual window into what actually transpired between analyst and analysand during the treatment hours. These case studies concern particularly troubled, often traumatized patients-the very hard to reach or difficult to treat clients with whom social workers have long been familiar. They include a reanalysis by the same analyst of a patient whose first therapy ended in a stalemate; an account of transference and countertransference phenomena during termination; a report on the analysis of a young woman who experienced both chronic and stress-related trauma; and an account of the special issues involved in the treatment of an aging woman. Most of the case studies reflect the influence of Dr. Sanville, whose work has long evinced the therapeutic imagination and disciplined creativity to which all the contributors aspire.

Tthe contributors to this volume offer the salutary reminder that analytic work is built on a relationship of respect and empathy and that treatment success follows from the therapist's willingness to accommodate the unique needs of individual patients. In honoring Jean Sanville, The Social Work Psychoanalyst's Casebook speaks to the robustness of a multidisciplinary approach to psychopathology that transcends the bounds of any single profession-an approach in which contemporary psychoanalysis is enlarged by the insights and emphases of social work just as social work is enriched by the clinical wisdom of psychoanalysis.