Affiliation:
1. New York University, American Psychological Association,
2. Yeshiva University,
Abstract
Regression is one of the most controversial topics in the psychoanalytic literature, and disagreements continue regarding a number of propositions central to the issue. On the one hand are those who maintain a traditional view that analysis facilitates regression, through both its setting and its method. On the other are critics from diverse theoretical schools, Freudian, Kleinian, and interpersonal, who have argued that the setting does not, and that the analyst should not, induce or encourage regression. This paper reexamines the fundamentals of regression and relates the concept to the notion of altered states of consciousness. From a relational position, it is argued that patient and analyst mutually regulate regressive states in each other, and that this is an important aspect of the analytic process. One of the analyst's roles is to facilitate the patient's shift into the state best suited for the task of the moment and, often, to improve the patient's ability to internally and interpersonally regulate and move between various states of consciousness.The analyst's commitment to state control as a mutual endeavor helps safeguard the patient's autonomy.
Subject
Clinical Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
Reference72 articles.
1. - ( 1987). The dynamics of interpretation. In Psychoanalysis: Clinical Theory and Practice. Madison, CT: International Universities Press, 1991, pp. 381-396.
Cited by
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