ABSTRACT

Drawing on research in the fields of cognitive and developmental psychology, attachment, trauma, and neuroscience, as well as 20 years in forensic and private practice, Paul Renn deftly illustrates the ways in which this research may be used to inform an integrated empirical/hermeneutic model of clinical practice. He suggests that silent, invisible processes derived from the past maintain non-optimal ways of experiencing and relating in the present, and that a neuroscience understanding of the dynamic nature of memories, and of the way in which the implicit and explicit memory systems operate and interact, is salient to a concomitant understanding of trauma, personality development, and therapeutic action. Specifically, Renn argues that an intersubjective psychodynamic model can use the power of an emotionally meaningful therapeutic relationship to gradually facilitate both relational and neurological changes in patients with trauma histories. Taken as a whole, these themes reflect a paradigmatic shift in psychoanalytic thinking about clinical work and the process of change.

chapter |6 pages

The Two Main Memory Systems

A Neuroscience Perspective

chapter |8 pages

Memory, Trauma, and Dissociation

The Reemergence of Trauma-Related Childhood Memories

chapter |22 pages

Psychoanalysis and the Internal World

How Different Theories Understand the Concept of Mind *

chapter |32 pages

Attachment and Intersubjectivity

Developmental Perspectives on the Internal World *

chapter |25 pages

A Contemporary Relational Model

Integrating Attachment, Trauma, and Neuroscience Research

chapter |15 pages

Intersubjectivity, Attachment, and Implicit Memory

The Development of Representational Models

chapter |28 pages

Brief, Time-Limited Psychodynamic Psychotherapy

A Case of Intimate Violence from a Forensic Setting *