Jason Aronson, Inc.
Pages: 278
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-56821-093-3 • Paperback • March 1994 • $76.00 • (£58.00)
978-1-4616-2731-9 • eBook • March 1994 • $72.00 • (£55.00)
Martha Stark, M.D., a graduate of the Harvard Medical School and the Boston Psychoanalytic Institute, is a psychiatrist/psychoanalyst in private practice in Newton Centre, Massachusetts. Dr. Stark is on the faculty of both the Boston Psychoanalytic Institute and the Massachusetts Institute for Psychoanalysis. She is also a Clinical Instructor in Psychiatry at the Harvard Medical School, has a teaching appointment at the Massachusetts Mental Health Center, and is on the faculty of the Center for Psychoanalytic Studies at the Massachusetts General Hospital.
Part 1 Part I: Understanding Resistance
Chapter 2 The Concept of Resistance
Chapter 3 Resistance as Failure to Grieve
Chapter 4 Mastering Resistance by Way of Grieving
Chapter 5 Grieving, Internalization, and Development of Capacity
Chapter 6 Development of Pathology
Chapter 7 Working with the Transference
Part 8 Part II: Clinical Interventions
Chapter 9 Listening to the Patient
Chapter 10 Responding to The Patient
Part 11 Part III: Clinical Practice
Chapter 12 The Cocoon Transference
Chapter 13 The Positive Transference and Its Disruptions
Chapter 14 The Negative Transference
Chapter 15 The Attainment of Mature Hope
Every so often a book emerges from the vast sea of analytic writings that startles in its creativity and usefulness. A Primer on Working with Resistance is just such a book. Dr. Stark is as clear as a bell. She manages complex theoretical concepts with sophistication and great sensitivity for the material. For example, the distinctions she makes between convergent and divergent conflict, or between illusion and distortion, are elegant. The question and answer format of the book is reassuring forthe beginner, and a delight for the more experienced reader as well.
— Anne Alonso PhD, Harvard Medical School
A Primer on Working with Resistance is much broader than the title would suggest. Stark describes the entire panorama of the therapeutic encounter in a style that is forthright, simple to understand and yet not oversimplified. Martha Stark manages to offer practical advice within the context of a sophisticated reading of psychoanalytic theory. A Primer on Working with Resistance is an invaluable and unique guide.
— Arnold H. Modell M.D.
Emphasizing from the beginning the primacy of one's relationship to the object in addition to the roles of drive and of self, Stark weaves a challenging, cohesive thread originating from parental trauma and reactive defenses against grieving, which serve to preserve a relationship to the early object at the expense of what she refers to as 'illusion' and 'distortion.' The goal of treatment becomes the search to replace traumatic frustration and need with 'capacity,' and with the bravery of facing the unbearable reality of parental fallibility and abusiveness.
— Andrew P. Morrison M.D.
Every so often a book emerges from the vast sea of analytic writings that startles in its creativity and usefulness. A Primer on Working with Resistance is just such a book. Dr. Stark is as clear as a bell. She manages complex theoretical concepts with sophistication and great sensitivity for the material. For example, the distinctions she makes between convergent and divergent conflict, or between illusion and distortion, are elegant. The question and answer format of the book is reassuring for the beginner, and a delight for the more experienced reader as well.
— Anne Alonso PhD, Harvard Medical School