One day, in 1996, with a leap from adjective to noun, a new concept arose within psychoanalytic thought: the Infantile. This term remained so pertinent over time that it has become the core of the title of the 52nd IPA Congress.
Florence Guignard was the author who first formulated it in such an accomplished form, and in today's episode she draws important clinical consequences from the theoretical reflection on this concept concerning the analytic relationship and the interpretative activity of the psychoanalyst in their daily work.
The Infantile -with a capital “I”- is a limit-concept, which aims at describing a "flexible" structure, at the limits of our animality, at the borders of our Unconscious and our Preconscious system. Being the first and main means of organization of our Ego drives, the Infantile is also the place of our primary fantasies and of the mnemonic traces of our first sensory-motor experiences. It is the most acute point of our emotions and feelings in their non-verbal state.
Florence Guignard describes how the patient’s Infantile and the analyst’s Infantile are interweaving in the transference-countertransference situation, as beautifully illustrated by Mikael Vilchez artistic creation, enriched by Rhoda Bawdekar’s interpretation of it. Florence Guignard shows us how the Infantile can serve as a lever in the case of blind spots and stopper interpretations.
A clinical example of a blind spot in the analyst will be published in the second volume of “Psychoanalytic Concepts and Technique in Development. The psychoanalyst in the city”.
Florence Guignard is a Swiss and French psychoanalyst, Training analyst of the Paris Society and a direct member of the IPA for the Training in Child and Adolescent Psychoanalysis. She co-founded the European Society for Child and Adolescent Psychoanalysis.
She is an internationally renowned author and since 1970 her work, translated into several languages, notably on female sexuality and the child, has contrìbuted significantly to the renewal of psychoanalytical thought.
link to the paper https://docs.google.com/document/d/1UC1QF8Yirl8CZ5i42rWwTxvD5_qfwc5B/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=112457875385152358388&rtpof=true&sd=true
This episode is available also in French
Credits
© Forbidden Denimeries by Mikael Vilchez, 2021
Visual editing and design, Rhoda Bawdekar
Music, Chopin Ballade no. 4, Op. 52
Ludovica Grassi - Music, Silence and Psychoanalysis
Christophe Dejours - Sublimation between Suffering and Pleasure at Work
Werner Bohleber: Trauma - Catastrophic Reality and the Overwhelmed Psyche.
Nancy Chodorow - “Thoughts for the times on women and men”.
Rui Aragão Oliveira - Why pleasure?
Paulina Zukerman: “Couples and Families: A Psychoanalytic Perspective on Money Issues”.
Jack Drescher - Attending To Sexual Compulsivity in a Gay Man.
José Eduardo Fischbein - “The Body in The Psychoanalytic Session”.
Patricia O‘Donnell: “Of Flies and Spiders - Gradiva and Louise Bourgeois”.
Vera Lamanno Adamo - The Psychoanalyst, The Filmmaker And The Art Of Sculpting Time.
Marion M. Oliner - Psychoanalytic Studies on Dysphoria: The False Accord in the Divine Symphony.
Christine Anzieu Premmereur - On the Construction of Auto Eroticism.
Craig San Roque - Mourning Melancholia and The Echo Effect
Laura Colombi - The Dangerous Call Of The Wild. Clinical Considerations About Dissociation Into Fantasy.
Katy Bogliatto - Experiences of caesura in Medically Assisted Reproduction.
Manuela Utrilla Robles - Convulsions in Psychoanalytical Institutions.
Panel: "The Inner Child And The Analytical Session".
Mark Solms - The Hidden Spring.
Angelika Staehle - Meetings of Societies on Education.
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