ABSTRACT

This collection of papers, published between 1976 and 2003, traces the innovative connections which the eminent group analyst Dennis Brown made between medicine and psychoanalysis. They reveal his important insights into how the principles of group analysis can improve our understanding of philosophy and ethics, and trace the development of trans-cultural dimensions of group analysis.

Beginning with Dennis’ early work in dermatology, the first section of Resonance and Reciprocity provides a fascinating overview of the insights gained into psychosomatic conditions through the application of psychoanalysis and group analysis. The second section builds on the tenet of group analysis that therapy should change the therapist as well as the client, addressing the changes that can take place in the therapeutic milieu, both in client and provider. The chapter on drowsiness, a modern classic, provides a significant contribution to our understanding of the emotional and physical changes that the therapist experiences during analysis, and its wider implications for our appreciation of how changes in mental and physical states are affected by a person’s emotional world. The final section reveals how Dennis Brown extended his interest and his activities beyond the individual, the small and the large group, and studied groups within and across cultures.

This book provides not only a solid understanding of complex analytical notions but also opens the road for future development. It will appeal to students and professionals in psychoanalysis, psychotherapy and group psychotherapy.

part |34 pages

Psychosomatics

chapter |12 pages

Listening to Eczema

Deductions and predictions

chapter |7 pages

The Royal Road to the Mysterious Leap

The psychosoma and the analytic process

part |96 pages

Psychoanalysis and Group Analysis

chapter |11 pages

Text, Context and Texture

Free speech in the service of health and healing

chapter |10 pages

Dialogue for Change

chapter |8 pages

Confrontation in the Group-Analytic Matrix

Toward a classification

chapter |17 pages

Self Development through Subjective Interaction

A fresh look at ‘ego training in action'

chapter |7 pages

Fair Shares and Mutual Concern

The role of sibling relationships

part |101 pages

Transculturality and Metapsychology

chapter |10 pages

Context, Content and Process

Interrelationships between small and large groups in a transcultural workshop

chapter |8 pages

Views of Maastricht and Heidelberg

Some questions arising from two transcultural workshops seen by observers with different roles

chapter |7 pages

Use and Abuse of Cultural Differences

Analysis and ethics in transcultural workshop settings

chapter |20 pages

Foulkes's Basic law of Group Dynamics 50 Years on

Abnormality, injustice and the renewal of ethics

chapter |21 pages

Pairing Bion and Foulkes

Towards a metapsychosociology?

chapter |24 pages

Bion and Foulkes

Basic assumptions and beyond