Article

The American Journal of Psychoanalysis (2007) 67, 141–149. doi:10.1057/palgrave.ajp.3350022

Ferenczi's Clinical and Theoretical Conception of Trauma: A Brief Introductory Map

This paper was presented at the IPA 44th Congress, Rio de Janeiro, July 29–31, 2005, in a Panel on "Ferenczi and trauma" including papers of Franco Borgogno, Pedro Boschan, Gilda Sabsay de Foks, Luis Martín Cabré and Jane Kézem (Chair).

Franco Borgogno1

Correspondence: Franco Borgogno Ph. D., Via Cavour 46, 10123 Torino, Italy. e-mail: borgogno@psych.unito.it

1Ph.D., is Professor of Clinical Psychology at Psychology Faculty of Turin University; Full Member of the International Psychoanalytical Association, and Training and Supervising Analyst of the Società Psicoanalitica Italiana. He is the author of many published articles and several books (most recently, Psicoanalisi come Percorso; now in press at Open Gate Press; Ferenczi oggi; and coEditor of Quaderni di Psicoterapia Infantile and of Bion's Legacy to Groups and W.R. Bion: Between Past and Future).

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Abstract

In this paper, I am going to limit myself to tracing a map of the principal points in Ferenczi's thinking concerning trauma. Ferenczi's contribution to trauma theory is fundamental, even though up to today—in spite of the recent "Ferenczian Renaissance"—it still remains for many psychoanalysts simply not acknowledged and not considered and, when it is acknowledged and considered, it is frequently misunderstood or reported only in part. Perhaps this is because passages of his theory are extrapolated without knowing his entire clinical theoretical way or because he is quoted through others without the authors having personally read his work. These last ones are typical habits, as we know, to project one's own ideas, especially our prejudices.

Keywords:

trauma, working-through, interpsychic dynamics, Ferenczi, psychoanalytic relationship

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