The Clinic of Donald W. Winnicott offers all readers a glimpse of what Winnicott brings to the understanding of the human being, and will appeal to students new to his work, as well as practitioners looking for a concise overview of his ...
Author: Laura Dethiville
Publisher: Routledge
ISBN: 9780429674624
Category: Psychology
Page: 130
View: 887
Paediatric psychoanalyst Donald W. Winnicott is widely recognized as a remarkable clinician. Deprivation, regression, play, antisocial tendencies and "the use of the object" are part of the many clinical conceptions he conceived, and here Laura Dethiville explains each in a clear and precise way, highlighting Winnicott’s originality and enduring relevance. The Clinic of Donald W. Winnicott offers all readers a glimpse of what Winnicott brings to the understanding of the human being, and will appeal to students new to his work, as well as practitioners looking for a concise overview of his work.
Since 2000, the main focus of Clinic activities has been the wider dissemination
of the work and ideas of Dr Donald W. Winnicott (1896–1971), the distinguished
English paediatrician, child psychiatrist, and psychoanalyst, who made an ...
Author: Andre Green
Publisher: Routledge
ISBN: 9780429903106
Category: Psychology
Page: 48
View: 490
The third book in the Winnicott Clinic Lecture Series contains a lecture from the author on Winnicott's theory on play. He discusses Winnicott's view on the importance of play and then moves on to presenting his own, somewhat contradictory, view on it. The author provides an innovative and provocative perspective on the subject, inviting people to think independently rather than accepting theories already laid out for them.
Early in my career a little boy came to hospital by himself and said to me “Please,
Doctor, mother complains of a pain in my stomach,” and this drew my attention
usefully to the part mother can play. (1948b, p. 92) Here Winnicott shows us a ...
Author: Angela Joyce
Publisher: Routledge
ISBN: 9780429847394
Category: Psychology
Page: 174
View: 983
In November 2015, The Winnicott Trust held a major conference in London to celebrate the forthcoming publication of the Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott. Most of the papers given then now constitute the chapters in this book. It not only reflects the ongoing contemporary relevance of Winnicott's work, clinical and theoretical, but these chapters demonstrate the aliveness of Winnicott's contribution as present day practitioners and academics use his ideas in their own way. The chapters range from accounts of the early developmental processes and relationships (Roussillon, Murray), the psychoanalytic setting (Bolognini, Bonaminio, Fabozzi, Joyce, Hopkins) creativity and the arts (Wright, Robinson), Winnicott in the outside world (Kahr, Karpf), to the challenge to the psychoanalytic paradigm that Winnicott's ideas constitute (Loparic).
London . Winnicott , Donald W. ( 1919 ) . Letter to Violet Winnicott , 15 November
. In : The Spontaneous Gesture , 1987b ( pp . 1-4 ) . Winnicott , Donald W. ( 1920a
) . A Shropshire Surgeon . St. Bartholomew's Hospital Journal , 27 : 103 .
Author: Brett Kahr
Publisher: Routledge
ISBN: 9780429898266
Category: Psychology
Page: 222
View: 174
A distillation of painstaking research into the life of Donald Winnicott, tracing his life from his childhood in Plymouth, through his career in paediatrics, to his election as President of the British Psycho-Analytic Society. The author makes many interesting links between Winnicott's life and the development of his theories.
The collection of papers that forms The Maturational Processes and the Facilitating Environment brings together Dr Winnicott’s published and unpublished papers on psychoanalysis and child development during the period 1957-1963.
Author: Donald W. Winnicott
Publisher: Routledge
ISBN: 9780429921414
Category: Psychology
Page: 296
View: 751
Donald Winnicott (1896-1971) was trained in paediatrics, a profession that he practised to the end of his life, in particular at the Paddington Green Children’s Hospital. He began analysis with James Strachey in 1923, became a member of the British Psychoanalytical Society in 1935, and twice served as its President. He was also a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and of the British Psychological Society. The collection of papers that forms The Maturational Processes and the Facilitating Environment brings together Dr Winnicott’s published and unpublished papers on psychoanalysis and child development during the period 1957-1963. It has, as its main theme, the carrying back of the application of Freud’s theories to infancy. Freud showed that psycho-neurosis has its point of origin in the interpersonal relationships of the first maturity, belonging to the toddler age. Dr Winnicott explores the idea that mental hospital disorders relate to failures of development in infancy. Without denying the importance of inheritance, he has developed the theory that schizophrenic illness shows up as the negative of processes that can be traced in detail as the positive processes of maturation in infancy and early childhood.
The collected letters of Donald Winnicott, a central figure in British psychoanalysis in the first post-Freud generation.
Author: F. Robert Rodman
Publisher: Routledge
ISBN: 9780429922312
Category: Psychology
Page: 212
View: 512
This volume consists of the collected letters of D. W. Winnicott, a central figure in British psychoanalysis in the generation following Freud. Suspicious of dogma and deeply committed to the value of his own observations, he maintained a highly personal therapeutic and theoretical style. His common sense, humour, warmth, and individualism made him resemble an old-fashioned family doctor, while at the same time his soaring intellect addressed the most fundamental matters of the mind.Winnicott was a skilled writer with a gift for making his ideas accessible to general readers as well as professionals. He was also a prolific correspondent. This selection of his letters - to colleagues, to the press, and to people who wrote to him about their problems - displays his lively style as well as his characteristic outspokenness and spontaneity. A pediatrician before he became a psychoanalyst, Winnicott was much concerned with the nature of relationships, beginning with that of mother and infant.
Box 1 , File 3 , Donald W . Winnicott Papers , Archives of Psychiatry , History of
Psychiatry Section , Department of Psychiatry , The Oskar Diethelm Library of the
History of Psychiatry , The New York Hospital , Cornell Medical Center , New
York ...
Winnicott , D . W . ( 1953 ) . “ Transitional Objects and Transitional Phenomena :
A Study of the First Not - Me Possession . ” International Journal of
Psychoanalysis 34 , 2 , pp . 89 – 97 . Winnicott , Donald W . ( 1955 ) . “ The
Depressive Position ...
Author: Paul J. Albanese
Publisher: Praeger
ISBN: UOM:39015055917663
Category: Business & Economics
Page: 366
View: 474
Why do consumers behave as they do? Albanese has formulated an operational approach to the organization of the personality of an individual from psychoanalytic object relations theory combined with an interpersonal theory of the personality. He relates this to the neoclassical theory of the consumer.
ED 336 252 Winnicott ( Donald W ) From the Clinic to the Classroom : D. W. Winnicott , James Britton , and the Revolution in Writing Theory . ED 347 567
Winnipeg School Division Number 1MB Library Media Services Handbook . ED
343 603 ...
In his illuminating introduction, Masud Khan, to whom Dr Winnicott's case notes were entrusted, relates this definite text of Holding and Interpretation: Fragment of an Analysis to an earlier phase of the treatment of the same patient ...
Author: Donald W. Winnicott
Publisher: Routledge
ISBN: 9780429914546
Category: Psychology
Page: 208
View: 234
In his illuminating introduction, Masud Khan, to whom Dr Winnicott's case notes were entrusted, relates this definite text of Holding and Interpretation: Fragment of an Analysis to an earlier phase of the treatment of the same patient described by Winnicott in his paper 'Withdrawal and Regression', also included in this volume. The case documents the therapeutic care of a highly gifted professional man who suffered a psychotic breakdown with acute depression, and who, through analysis, and hospital treatment, was gradually helped to recovery. It is remarkable for many things: Dr Winnicott's skill at 'holding' the patient in the analytical sessions, and providing guidance through sensitive interpretation; his ability to re-enforce the patient's sexual and ego functions; his instinctive recognition of the value of silence (as a way of showing trust, and of not destroying by intent); his capacity to accept the paradox that verbal communication can be both meaningful and a negation of psychic reality; and, not least, his acute judgment of when to stop the analysis.
The volume includes papers on juvenile delinquency; critical interventions in debates on the physical treatment of mental disorder, in particular leucotomy and electroconvulsive therapy; and a selection of letters to colleagues, notable ...
Author: D. W. Winnicott
Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 9780190271350
Category:
Page: 464
View: 655
Donald Woods Winnicott (1896-1971) was one of Britain's leading psychoanalysts and pediatricians. The author of some of the most enduring theories of the child and of child analysis, he coined terms such as the "good enough mother" and the "transitional object" (known to most as the security blanket). Winnicott's work is still used today by child and family therapists, social workers, teachers, and psychologists, and his papers and clinical observations are routinely studied by trainees in psychiatry and clinical psychology. Beyond the expected audiences of psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists, Winnicott also wrote for parents, teachers, social workers, childcare specialists, pediatricians, psychologists, art and play therapists, and others in the field of child development. Now, for the first time, virtually all of Winnicott's writings are presented chronologically in 12 volumes, edited and annotated by leading Winnicott scholars. The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott brings together letters, clinical case reports, child consultations, psychoanalytic articles, and papers, including previously unpublished works on topics of continuing interest to contemporary readers (such as delinquency, antisocial behavior, corporal punishment, and child care). The Collected Works begins with an authoritative General Introduction by editors Lesley Caldwell and Helen Taylor Robinson, while each of the volumes features an original introduction examining that volume's major themes and written by an international Winnicott scholar and psychoanalyst. Throughout The Collected Works, editorial annotations provide historical context and background information of scholarly and clinical value. The final volume contains new and illuminating appendices, comprehensive bibliographies of Winnicott's publications and letters, documentation of his lectures and broadcasts, and a selection of his drawings. This extraordinary publication will be an essential resource for Winnicott admirers the world over and those interested in the history and origins of the fields of child development and psychoanalysis.
A collection of writings by one of the leading figures in psychoanalysis in the twentieth century addresses such topics as psychosomatic disorder, interpretation in analysis, and psychotherapy with children and adolescents
Author: Donald Woods Winnicott
Publisher: Harvard University Press
ISBN: 0674720903
Category: Psychology
Page: 602
View: 970
A collection of writings by one of the leading figures in psychoanalysis in the twentieth century addresses such topics as psychosomatic disorder, interpretation in analysis, and psychotherapy with children and adolescents
LU Oil A. large Hill , W. Hoffer , H. Holden , J. Food , Mona A. Hughes , Isabel H.
Hunter , Susannah Isaacs , E. Jaques , M. Joffe , Betty Joseph , V. B. Kanter ,
Masud ... Lorna Wheelan , A. H. Williams , Lorna E. Williams , A. R. Wilson , J. L.
Wilson , Clara Winnicott , D. W. Winnicott , Fanny D. Wride , S. C. B. Yorke . ...
LONDON VARICOSE CLINIC , 14-28 York Rd . , S.W. 11 ( Battersea 1663 ) -Out -
patients .
Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic , 40 , 357 – 382 . Padel , J . H . ( 1978 ) . ...
Rodman , F . R . ( Ed . ) . ( 1987 ) . The spontaneous gesture : Selected letters of
D . W . Winnicott . ... Obituary : Donald W . Winnicott . International Journal of
Psycho ...
Author: Cecil Holden Patterson
Publisher: Pearson College Division
ISBN: UOM:49015002954387
Category: Psychology
Page: 536
View: 235
This text offers detailed systematic summaries of 14 major psychotherapy theories, enabling both students and the general reader to better appreciate and evaluate each theory. Each chapter features a sketch of the theorist and the philosophy behind the therapy.
... Dr. Ernst Ticho* addressed the Society on "Donald W. Winnicott, Martin Buber,
and the Theory of Personal Relationships." He had noted parallels between the
ideas of Buber and Winnicott in the course of studying life goals and treatment ...
Donald W. Winnicott ... This is a case chosen from my hospital clinic . ... with the
child we discovered that there were features showing us that the mother ' s
attendance with her child at the hospital indicated a need in the mother herself .
Author: Donald W. Winnicott
Publisher:
ISBN: STANFORD:36105004537150
Category: Medical
Page: 410
View: 617
A classic work of 1971 now returned to in-print status on acid-free paper. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
This volume collates the author's mature reflections on the relationship between mothers and their babies and on the psychological processes taking place in the infant around the time of birth and shortly afterwards.
Author: Donald Woods Winnicott
Publisher: Free Assn Books
ISBN: 1853430072
Category: Family & Relationships
Page: 125
View: 971
Addresses the central issues of infancy. This volume collates the author's mature reflections on the relationship between mothers and their babies and on the psychological processes taking place in the infant around the time of birth and shortly afterwards.
This collection brings together many of Winnicott's most important pieces, including previously unpublished talks and several essays from books and journals now difficult to obtain.
Author: Donald Woods Winnicott
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
ISBN: 0393306674
Category: Psychology
Page: 287
View: 367
One of the most gifted and creative psychoanalysts of his generation, D. W. Winnicott made lasting contributions to our understanding of the minds of children. His ideas have influenced the diverse pyschoanalytic schools of Anna Freud, Melanie Klein, and Hans Kohut. But his reach extends far beyond professional circles: his talks to general audiences over the years won him enormous numbers of followers among parents and teachers who have found his obervations rich in penetrating insight. This collection brings together many of Winnicott's most important pieces, including previously unpublished talks and several essays from books and journals now difficult to obtain. They range widely in topic--from "The Concept of a Healthy Individual" and "The Value of Depression" to "Delinquency as a Sign of Hope"--and elucidate some of Winnicott's seminal ideas, such as the "transitional object" and the concept of false self. All convey Winnicott's vision of the ways in which the developing self interacts with the family and the larger society.