ABSTRACT

Based on rich clinical experience and on theory from numerous psychoanalytical works, this book explores and analyzes the emergence and development of the psychic life.

Birth to Psychic Life explores the genesis of the psychic apparatus, reconstructs the development of subjectivity, with its ups and downs in babies as in all subjects, and studies the relationship between mental states at the dawn of psychic life and those characteristic of psychopathology. The book refers to Freudian, Kleinian and post-Kleinian works, proposing articulations between the different theoretical models. The referenced works’ contributions to the understanding of early psychic disorders, as well as to the implications of infantile psychic suffering in adulthood, are essential. The authors identify the three psychic constellations, recognized by many, that accompany the psychic birth and suggest new more adequate names in view of current works on subjectivity: the auto-sensual position, the symbiotic position and the depressive position. Many other new and original proposals are developed by the authors.

Providing tools to think about the processes of psychic growth, this book will be of interest to all psychoanalysts and psychotherapists working with infants and interested in the impact of early psychic development throughout life.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

part I|70 pages

First postulate

chapter 2|49 pages

The first containing external object

The momentary object

part II|42 pages

Second postulate

chapter 3|23 pages

The optimal containing object

chapter 4|17 pages

Psychic space 1

part III|86 pages

Third postulate

chapter 5|26 pages

On adhesive identification

Genesis of the psychic skin

chapter 6|15 pages

On symbiosis

A common skin

chapter 7|26 pages

On the skin-ego

A complete psychic envelope 1

chapter 8|17 pages

Conclusion

Psychic birth and psychopathological deviations

part IV|62 pages

Fourth postulate

chapter 9|26 pages

Splitting and idealization

The life drives/death drives duality

part V|28 pages

Fifth postulate

chapter 11|15 pages

Projective identification

Definition and description 1

chapter 12|11 pages

Projective identification

Motives, consequences, phenomenology 1

part VI|64 pages

Sixth postulate

chapter 13|41 pages

The inadequacies of the containing object

chapter 14|6 pages

Phantasied attacks on the object

chapter 15|11 pages

“Second skin” formation

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue