749:" and characterized them as the substitution of the analyst for a person from the patient's past. According to Freud's description: "a whole series of psychological experiences are revived not as belonging to the past, but as applying to the person of the analyst at the present moment". When transference neurosis develops, the relationship with the therapist becomes the most important one for the patient, who directs strong infantile feelings and conflicts towards the therapist, e.g. the patient may react as if the analyst is his/her father.
86:
787:, called "transference resistance". At this point, the analysis of the transference becomes difficult since new obstacles arise in therapy, e.g. the analysand may insist on fulfilling the infantile wishes that emerged in transference, or may refuse to acknowledge that the current experience is, in fact, a reproduction of a past experience. However, the successful resolution of transference neurosis through interpretation will lead to the lifting of
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The replacement of the infantile neurosis by transference neurosis and its resolution through interpretation remains the main focus of the classical psychoanalytic therapy. In other types of therapy, either the transference neurosis does not develop at all, or it does not play a central role in the
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Transference neurosis reveals the particular meanings that the analysand has given to current infantile relationships and events, which generate internal conflicts between wishes and particular defenses formed to strive against them. These meanings are united and create several transference
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to solve the infantile conflicts in new ways. Furthermore, it will allow the analysand to recognize that the current relationship with the analyst is based on repetition of childhood experiences, leading to the detachment of the patient from the analyst.
605:
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therapy process. Although it is more likely for transference neurosis to develop in psychoanalysis, where the sessions are more frequent, it may also appear during psychotherapy.
915:
Richard D. Chessick, "Psychoanalytic
Peregrinations I: Transference and Transference Neurosis Revisited", Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis, 30(1), 83–97, 2002.
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It is generated by the feelings of frustration that the analysand inevitably experiences during sessions, since the analyst does not fulfill the analysand's longings.
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W. W. Meissner, "A Note on
Transference and Alliance: I. Transference – Variations on a Theme", Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, Vol. 65, No. 2 (Spring 2001.
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741:'s case history, Freud suggested that during therapy the creation of new symptoms stops, but new versions of the patient's
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Stephen A. Mitchell, Margaret J. Black: "Freud and Beyond: a
History of Modern Psychoanalytic Thought". Basic Books, 1995.
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928:"Resolution of the Transference" International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis. The Gale Group, Inc, 2005. Answers.com
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921:"Transference Neurosis" International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis. The Gale Group, Inc, 2005. Answers.com
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Sigmund Freud, "Case
Histories 1 – Dora and Little Hans", The Penguin Freud Library, Volume 8, 1990.
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R. Horacio
Etchegoyen, "The Fundamentals of Psychoanalytic Technique", Karnac Books, London, 1991.
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Transference neurosis can be distinguished from other kinds of transference because:
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Regression and repetition play a key role in the creation of transference neurosis.
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In transference neurosis the symptoms are not stable, but they are transformed.
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Once transference neurosis has developed, it leads to a form of
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and impulses are generated. He called these newer versions "
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http://www.answers.com/topic/resolution-of-the-transference
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It is very vivid and it rekindles the infantile neurosis.
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Reed, 1994, Shaw, 1991, Tyson, 1996, at
Meissner, 2001
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923:http://www.answers.com/topic/transference-neurosis
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107:Psychosocial development (Erikson)
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624:List of schools of psychoanalysis
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606:Columbia University Center for
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492:The Sublime Object of Ideology
462:The Mass Psychology of Fascism
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432:Beyond the Pleasure Principle
422:Psychology of the Unconscious
388:The Interpretation of Dreams
811:Infatuation in transference
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949:Psychoanalytic terminology
409:Three Essays on the Theory
733:that develops during the
587:Boston Graduate School of
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102:Psychosexual development
816:Narcissistic neurosis
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719:Transference neurosis
680:Psychology portal
659:Psychoanalytic theory
887:The Gale group, 2005
791:and will enable the
644:Child psychoanalysis
132:Id, ego and superego
70:a series of articles
954:Freudian psychology
167:Countertransference
855:(Etchegoyen, 1991)
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172:Resistance
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362:Winnicott
342:Spielrein
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182:Dreamwork
821:Neurosis
804:See also
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637:See also
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307:Kristeva
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267:Guattari
247:Ferenczi
232:Chodorow
187:Cathexis
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68:Part of
28:ICD-9-CM
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46:D011572
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287:Jones
262:Fromm
212:Adler
157:Drive
54:[
33:94.31
739:Dora
332:Rank
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222:Bion
40:MeSH
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58:]
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