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The Relational Revolution in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy

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Relational psychoanalysis can accommodate the shockwaves in the world and the most intimate encounters between analyst and analysand and show how they are intertwined. This timely and elegant book is an invitation to understand the workings and theory of relational therapy at a time when issues of identity, attachment and the democratizing of psychoanalysis are at the centre of concerns in the field."

Dr. Susie Orbach, psychoanalyst, and author of Fat is a Feminist Issue, The Impossibility of Sex, and Bodies

The relational revolution led to what is arguably the most radical revision of our understanding of how to effect healing and change in the mind since Freud's ground-breaking work more than a century ago. In this concise yet comprehensive overview, Steven Kuchuck addresses core theories as well as newer, cutting edge trends within relational psychoanalysis and psychotherapy. This book defines postmodern relational concepts, and offers a clear, thoughtfully curated examination of relationality and its impact on psychoanalytic technique for both experienced clinicians and those newer to the field.

181 pages, Kindle Edition

Published February 26, 2021

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Steven Kuchuck

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Morgan Blackledge.
829 reviews2,712 followers
November 24, 2022
This is a really good, very brief, very concise introduction to relational psychoanalysis.

Author Steven Kuchuck is a TOTAL mensch.

He does a FANTASTIC job of boiling this material into a very readable, relatable and clinically useful form.

BRAVO!!!

So…

What (the fuck) is relational psychoanalysis (RP)?

I’m so glad you asked.

RP is relatively recent and still evolving school of psychoanalytic thought based in a two person (as opposed to a one person) psychology, and emphasizing the importance of relationships in human emotion and experience of self.

RP began in the 1980s as an attempt to integrate interpersonal psychoanalysis with British object relations theory, self psychology and attachment theory.

RP asserts that personality emerges from early formative relationships (attachment experiences) with caregivers e.g. parents (mostly mom, let’s face it) and other figures. RP assumes that therapeutic value emerges from the closely attuned, authentic, empathetic therapeutic relationship.

RP is philosophically allied with feminist and queer theory, as well as social constructionism and other forms of postmodern thought in that:

RP assumes that the analyst’s subjectivity and subjective experience is important to the therapeutic process, and affords the analyst the option to self disclose in ways that traditional psychoanalysis would consider anathema.

RP depathologized homosexuality and LGBTQ identity - yes that’s right, up until the 1990’s, psychoanalysis considered being gay or trans or queer a mental illness. RP was amongst the first schools of psychoanalysis to reject that (completely reprehensible) notion.

The author of this book, Steven Kuchuck describes what it was like to be a gay analyst at this time, and to work with gay clients. Kuchuck reflects on how unhealthy it was for him to withhold his own queerness, in masked silence, particularly with gay clients struggling with their own patholgized sexuality.

RP acknowledges race and intersectionality as important to the therapeutic process. Again, up until the 1990’s psychoanalysis didn’t think much about issues of race and class at all (at least not formally), with notable exceptions.

Kuchuck reflects on a growing body of BIPOC RP analysts who write extensively on the subject of racial transference and countertransference in analysis.

RP understands that the analyst and analysand co-create treatment (as opposed to putting the analyst in the expert role and the analysand in the patient role).

Kuchuck reflects on the radical role of intersubjectivity in RP, whereby the subjective experience of the analysand is co-created (discovered and explored) within the therapeutic dyad, rather than via authoritarian analyst interpretation of the analysands “subconscious” experience.

RP deemphasizes “one size fits all” therapeutic models and techniques in favor of a deeply personalized, and emergent “here and now” orientation.

Kuchuck reflects on the alive, ideographic and largely improvised approach to RP that emerges in the moment of therapy, based on principles and broad theory rather than relying heavily on techniques and nomothetical modalities.

Much more to say on this topic.

But that’s it for now.

GREAT BOOK.

Couldn’t put it down.

5/5 stars ⭐️
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Ryan.
100 reviews5 followers
March 28, 2022
Kuchuck's primer introduces prominent concepts, ideas, and movements that make up relational psychoanalysis. He highlights inherent tensions, conflicts, and growth points for the relational movement. He communicates complicated ideas clearly and succinctly. While his book is original and contributed to the field of relational psychoanalysis, it is also a fantastic place to start for anyone interested in learning about the relational movement.
Profile Image for Cris.
64 reviews1 follower
February 22, 2023
Great summary of relational psychotherapy, pointing to history, current writings and practice. I was excited about the final chapters focusing on current social issues and directions things might go in the future, but I feel those chapters read more like a list of names of people to read and be aware of along with statements of things being better than they were and that more needs to me done, so I was a bit disappointed that those chapters were not a more engaging read.

Overall, an ambitious project that I think Kuchuch pulls off well.
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