Stern anchors his understanding of therapeutic action in the freedom of both patient and analyst to create a meaningful experience with minimum inhibition. The field's capacity to generate meaning-and thus to make possible fully realized human living-rows from its freedom to respond spontaneously to the feelings, wants, and needs of its participants. To whatever extent this spontaneity is diminished, as it is in unconscious mutual enactment, we can be sure that some part of the field is frozen or otherwise rigidified. This position serves as the foundation of the psychoanalysis that Stern practices. The analyst aims to feel their way into compromises in the field, and then do whatever they can to grasp and dissolve them, knowing that they will have to be visited repeatedly, and dissolved again. These insights into interpersonal and relational field theory lead to descriptions of clinical interventions that are focused on the moment-to-moment emotional experience of both the patient and the analyst.
With valuable contributions to theory and emotionally immediate clinical vignettes, this book is essential for all psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists wishing to understand how the analyst's interventions grow from the analyst's emotional involvement in the clinical process.
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Warren Poland, author of Intimacy and Separateness in Psychoanalysis
'Donnel B. Stern is one of our most penetrating thinkers on the subject of field theory. He gently reminds us that emotional connections are operating in ways that are outside of our awareness. The moment-to-moment experience carries with it an opening into areas that have long been dormant. In this extraordinary contribution into the unseen and the unheard, Stern activates the inner world of the "other" and the "self". It is a major contribution that is a must-read.
Glen O. Gabbard, MD, clinical professor Psychiatry, Baylor College of Medicine
'With equal measures of brilliance, intellectual rigor, and generosity, this book reminds us why and how psychoanalysis is magical. In a series of expansive gestures, Donnel B. Stern stages encounters with ideas that, while seemingly familiar, reveal themselves to be fresh with possibility: otherness, in these pages, aligns with psychic freedom, and Stern persuasively shows that witnessing and recognition remain critical ingredients of the psychoanalytic endeavor. This book renews the promise of psychoanalysis, which is to ask more of us, always.'
Avgi Saketopoulou, psychoanalyst in private practice, and faculty of New York University's postdocotral program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis








