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Sensuality and Sexuality Across the Divide of Shame (Psychoanalytic Inquiry Book) PDF

178 Pages·2007·3.35 MB·English
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ER3475X_C000.indd 1 7/11/2007 7:44:09 AM ER3475X_C000d.indd 6 7/5/2007 6:39:01 AM Psychoanalytic Inquiry Book Series Vol. 1: Reflections on Self Psychology— Vol. 16: The Clinical Exchange: Techniques Joseph D. Lichtenberg & Derived from Self and Motivational Samuel Kaplan (eds.) Systems—Joseph D. Lichtenberg, Frank M. Lachmann, & James L. Fosshage Vol. 2: Psychoanalysis and Infant Research—Joseph D. Lichtenberg Vol. 17: Working Intersubjectively: Vol. 4: Structures of Subjectivity: Contextualism in Psychoanalytic Practice— Explorations in Donna M. Orange, Psychoanalytic Phenomenology— George E. Atwood, & Robert D. Stolorow George E. Atwood & Robert D. Stolorow Vol. 18: Kohut, Loewald, and the Vol. 7: The Borderline Patient: Emerging Postmoderns: A Comparative Study Concepts in Diagnosis, Psychodynamics, of Self and Relationship— and Treatment, Vol. 2—James S. Grotstein, Judith Guss Teicholz Marion F. Solomon, & Joan A. Lang (eds.) Vol. 8: Psychoanalytic Treatment: An Vol. 19: A Spirit of Inquiry: Communication Intersubjective Approach— in Psychoanalysis—Joseph D. Lichtenberg, Robert D. Stolorow, Bernard Brandchaft, Frank M. Lachmann, & James L. Fosshage & George E. Atwood Vol. 20: Craft and Spirit: A Guide Vol. 9: Female Homosexuality: Choice to Exploratory Psychotherapies— Without Volition—Elaine V. Siegel Joseph D. Lichtenberg Vol. 10: Psychoanalysis and Motivation— Joseph D. Lichtenberg Vol. 21: Attachment and Sexuality— Diana Diamond, Sidney J. Blatt, Vol. 11: Cancer Stories: Creativity and & Joseph D. Lichtenberg Self-Repair—Esther Dreifuss Kattan Vol. 12: Contexts of Being: Vol. 22: Psychotherapy and Medication: The Intersubjective Foundations The Challenge of Integration— of Psychological Life— Fredric N. Busch & Larry S. Sandberg Robert D. Stolorow & George E. Atwood Vol. 23: Trauma and Human Existence: Vol. 13: Self and Motivational Systems: Autobiographical, Psychoanalytic, and Toward a Theory of Psychoanalytic Philosophical Reflections— Technique—Joseph D. Lichtenberg, Frank Robert D. Stolorow M. Lachmann, & James L. Fosshage Vol. 14: Affects as Process: An Vol. 24: Jealousy and Envy: New Views Inquiry into the Centrality of Affect in about Two Powerful Emotions— Psychological Life—Joseph M. Jones Léon Wurmser & Heidrun Jarass Vol. 15: Understanding Therapeutic Action: Psychodynamic Concepts of Cure— Vol. 25: Sensuality and Sexuality Across the Lawrence E. Lifson (ed.) Divide of Shame—Joseph D. Lichtenberg ER3475X_C000.indd 2 7/11/2007 7:44:15 AM ER3475X_C000d.indd 6 7/5/2007 6:39:01 AM ER3475X_C000.indd 3 7/11/2007 7:44:18 AM ER3475X_C000.indd 4 7/11/2007 7:44:47 AM Acknowledgments My idea to reconsider in depth my original presentation of the sensual– sexual motivational system began at the 2006 meeting of the Eastern Division of the International Association for Psychoanalytic Self Psy- chology (IAPSP) in Boston. I was stimulated by a presentation of Mal- colm Slavin and discussions by all the members but particularly Shelley Doctors and my prior coauthors Frank Lachmann and James Fosshage. My already-formed central conception about the role of culture-derived shame separating sensuality and sexuality crystallized as I heard Peter Fonagy present a similar proposal using a different frame to develop it. As I wrote different chapters, I was aided and stimulated by discussions by numerous colleagues at presentations, such as at the 2006 IAPSP meeting in Chicago. I am especially indebted to Adrienne Harris, Estelle Shane, Sandra Hershberg, Heidi Block, and Andrew Morrison, who have led me to make specific additions and reformulations. Alan Kindler introduced me to the research of Katherine Frank and provided me with the opportunity to present chapters 1 and 2 to the Toronto Association for Self Psychology. My colleagues in an Institute of Contemporary Psy- chotherapy and Psychoanalysis study group chaired by Curtis Bristol have been generous and dedicated in their chapter-by-chapter discussion. I have borrowed (maybe shamelessly) from other sources to which I have had unique access: the Psychoanalytic Inquiry issues on Mothers and Daughters edited by Rosemary Balsam and Ruth Fischer, the Issue on Fathers and Daughters edited by Christine Kiefer, and the book Attach- ment and Sexuality edited by Diana Diamond, Sidney Blatt, and me. Elisabeth Fivaz-Depeursinge kindly invited me to view research tapes of her studies of family triangles in Lausanne, Switzerland, findings to which I have referred frequently. Paul Stepansky, the former head of The Analytic Press, has consistently encouraged my efforts. Many of the per- ix ER3475X_C000a.indd 9 7/26/2007 7:21:15 AM spectives to which I refer in the text derive from friends and colleagues, like that of Robert Stolorow on intersubjectivity, Jessica Benjamin on subjectivity in female development, Steven Mitchell and Lewis Aron on the relational perspective, and Ernest Wolf on selfobject experience. These approaches have become a core way of my thinking. My daughter, Amy Lichtenberg Saloukha, was instrumental in the preparation of the manuscript. My wife, Charlotte, patiently read and listened to portions of the manuscript, especially those for which I had uncertainties, and offered her sage advice. Finally, for me as a psychoanalyst, the most meaningful testing ground for proposals like those I advance is in the clinical setting of my patients and me struggling to come as close to get- ting it “right” about their and my sensual and sexual experiences as it affects their happiness and ability to relate, love, and lust lovingly. My final debt is to the many men and women who have trustingly revealed their inner and usually private worlds to me. x Acknowledgments ER3475X_C000a.indd 10 7/26/2007 7:21:16 AM IntroductIon Sex, according to an anonymous wit, is the joker in the deck. Looking at most recent mainstream psychoanalytic literature, a reader could eas- ily conclude sex, rather than any longer a wild card, has been tamed into established formulas such as psychosexual stages and an Oedipus complex. New Yorker cartoons attest to the public familiarity with and acceptance of these abstractions. Fonagy (2006), in his plenary address on a genuinely developmental theory of sexual enjoyment, noted: “A frightening survey of the use of sexual and relational language in the electronically searchable journals of psychoanalysis showed a dramatic decline in words in psychoanalytic articles directly concerning sexual- ity.” In 1996 (pp. 871–883), Green asked sardonically, “Has sexuality anything to do with psychoanalysis?” Of course, there are exceptions. A considerable body of literature has been developed by feminists and by analysts reconsidering formulations about homosexuality. In 2000, a journal, Studies in Gender and Sexuality, began publication. Mitchell in 2002 wrote Can Love Last? The Fate of Romance Over Time. Another exception that I draw on extensively is the contribution made by analytic researchers steeped in attachment theory to sexuality (Diamond, Blatt, & Lichtenberg, 2007). My hope is to draw the reader back to a consideration of sex as a wild card through a reformulation of the distinction between sensuality and sexuality. In each reformulation, I start with phenomena such as general observations and clinical vignettes. Obviously, all psychoanalytic for- mulations started with phenomena, such as symptoms, but the criticism of phenomenology has been that observables do not reveal unconscious processes—only psychoanalytically obtained information does. I agree with this critique, but I am not deterred by it. After over half a century as a psychoanalytic clinician, I believe that I can combine the two sources. Put more strongly, I believe I cannot not combine a phenomenological and analytic approach because that is how I think. Here, I reach back to xi ER3475X_C000b.indd 11 7/5/2007 6:40:06 AM

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Placed in a historical context, sexuality was once so prominent in psychoanalytic writing that sexual drive and psychoanalysis were synonymous. The exciting discovery of childhood sexuality filled the literature. Then other discoveries came to the fore until sexuality slipped far in the background.
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