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Overview"Dialogues with Michael Eigen spans 20 years of diverse interviews and interactions with the acclaimed psychologist Michael Eigen, including interlocutors from Italy, Spain, Portugal, Argentina, Sweden, Israel, and the United States, published together for the first time. This book explores the importance of soul reveries, psychoanalytic ""prayers"", and cultivation of psychoanalytic ""faith"" in Eigen’s work. The dialogues lay out Eigen’s privileging of emotions as messengers in need of recognition, as welcoming inner gestures for incubation, enabling a deep vitalizing contact of being with oneself and others. Eigen reminds us that struggling with one’s personality remains a life-long task, exposing us to various existential sufferings, agonies, traumas, and losses in need of soul confession, if not analytic prayer. The book seeks to help readers find, touch, and work with emotional realities a little better and support a growing intimate, creative relation to ourselves. The rich explorations of the interviews and interactions with Eigen help contribute to further appreciation of our experiential life and worlds it opens. Building on his work on mind–body–soul connections, Dialogues with Michael Eigen is an essential book for anyone interested in the spiritual side of psychoanalysis." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Michael Eigen , Loray Daws (Psychologist in private practice, Canada)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.412kg ISBN: 9780367278717ISBN 10: 0367278715 Pages: 245 Publication Date: 01 August 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsAbout the author About the editor Preface: Soul to soul: living with Michael Eigen Preface: So many voices within a voice Acknowledgements Introduction: “Meeting” Michael Eigen: a personal reverie PART 1 Emotions as messengers 1 Demons and wounds 2 Emotional transmissions and fluctuations of experience 3 On violence 4 Sensitivity and sense 5 Psyche singing PART 2 Incubation 6 Beginning to wait and waiting as beginning 7 Silence and intimacy 8 Flames and aloneness PART 3 Constant struggle and suffering 9 Toxins, damage, and processing traumatic emotions 10 The ever-healing wound: psychoanalysis and Kabbalah 11 I am turning into a barnacle 12 I want to be a woman: caesura, blackout, rebirth 13 The naked beginner PART 4 Confession and prayer 14 Psychoanalytic faith Reply: from touch to touch 15 Swimming in the psyche 16 Faith’s breath 17 In the land of the unknown IndexReviewsDialogues with Michael Eigen represents an extraordinary opportunity to listen to the voice of one of the most influential and internationally respected authors of contemporary psychoanalysis. In this case the form of the interview introduces the reader to a pleasant and fruitful conversation with him. The plurality of topics addressed, the original perspectives in which they are set, the interweaving with personal history, the advantage given by the experience of many years of clinical work, teaching and writing, make this book a mandatory reading for psychoanalysts and psychotherapists. No less extraordinary are the portraits of a whole gallery of pioneers of psychoanalysis, from Freud to Jung, from Klein to Bion; from Winnicott to Laing and so on. Beyond the possibility of exploring again the themes dear to the author, and already exposed in the many volumes of his prolific activity as a writer, in these dialogues, which cover a period of 18 years, the human qualities of Michael Eigen emerge more vividly and directly: discipline, study, competence, creativity, curiosity at 360 degrees for all that is vital inside and outside psychoanalysis. But then above all: wisdom, gentleness, humility, humanity, humor. Perhaps he would respond, in fact, as he does in the book to his interlocutor after a presentation, and as we can imagine, smiling and with a sparkle in his eyes: 'Now if I only knew the guy you're talking about'; or, on another page, 'After that introduction, I hope Michael Eigen shows up'. I can assure readers that in this new book Michael Eigen does show up. And we are grateful to him. -Giuseppe Civitarese, author of Sublime Subjects: Aesthetic Experience and Intersubjectivity in Psychoanalysis (2017) For Michael Eigen's many faithful and avid readers, this book provides the singular pleasure of hearing him in conversation; for others, it will be a splendid introduction. Eigen's independent and generous psychoanalytic spirit allows him to hear in many registers, to engage and transmit a spiritually-inflected psychoanalysis without falling into dogma or exclusion. Each interlocutor draws out aspects of his unique voice, while Eigen evokes creative response from those who interview him. A book to read for pleasure and inspiration. -Donna M. Orange, NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis; IPSS (Institute for the Psychoanalytic Study of Subjectivity) This book gives us a wonderful insight into one of the most brilliant psychoanalysts of all time. A crossroads may give us a nice metaphor of his works. A psychoanalyst who stands in such a place, debating his path, is going neither in one direction or the other: he is literally betwixt and between. This is why, in Mike Eigen's writings and speech, one can recognize a caesura that is not just a paradox, but a space for a deep-thinking performance and quite poetic metaphors, the great substances of his thoughts. -Arnaldo Chuster, M.D., training and teaching analyst, Rio de Janeiro Psychoanalytical Society, Brazil; author of A Lonesome Road: Essays on the Complexity of Bion's Work (2014) Dialogues with Michael Eigen give room to an exceptional dialogue with the reader, who gets more and more involved in a companionship with the author's journey along the years as a psychoanalyst with traumas and psychosis. Each chapter makes us feel at home not only with his books, but with a unique rhythm, between negativity and creativity, individual trials and social forces. They progressively open doors to unexpected sources of life linked to contemporary issues and to the land of the sacred. As psychoanalysis is also an oral tradition, I particularly appreciated the oral style, full of wit and humor, while deepening my reflection. Following Bion's advice to psychoanalysts, `you work with your personality', Michael Eigen awakens the reader with great generosity. -Francoise Davoine, author of History Beyond Trauma (2004) Dialogues with Michael Eigen represents an extraordinary opportunity to listen to the voice of one of the most influential and internationally respected authors of contemporary psychoanalysis. In this case the form of the interview introduces the reader to a pleasant and fruitful conversation with him. The plurality of topics addressed, the original perspectives in which they are set, the interweaving with personal history, the advantage given by the experience of many years of clinical work, teaching and writing, make this book a mandatory reading for psychoanalysts and psychotherapists. No less extraordinary are the portraits of a whole gallery of pioneers of psychoanalysis, from Freud to Jung, from Klein to Bion; from Winnicott to Laing and so on. Beyond the possibility of exploring again the themes dear to the author, and already exposed in the many volumes of his prolific activity as a writer, in these dialogues, which cover a period of time of eighteen years, the human qualities of Michael Eigen emerge more vividly and directly: discipline, study, competence, creativity, curiosity at three hundred and sixty degrees for all that is vital inside and outside psychoanalysis. But then above all: wisdom, gentleness, humility, humanity, humor. Perhaps he would respond, in fact, as he does in the book to his interlocutor after a presentation, and as we can imagine, smiling and with a sparkle in his eyes: 'Now if I only knew the guy you're talking about'; or, on another page, 'After that introduction, I hope Michael Eigen shows up'. I can assure readers that in this new book Michael Eigen does show up. And we are grateful to him. -Giuseppe Civitarese, author of Sublime Subjects: Aesthetic Experience and Intersubjectivity in Psychoanalysis (2017) For Michael Eigen's many faithful and avid readers, this book provides the singular pleasure of hearing him in conversation; for others, it will be a splendid introduction. Eigen's independent and generous psychoanalytic spirit allows him to hear in many registers, to engage and transmit a spiritually-inflected psychoanalysis without falling into dogma or exclusion. Each interlocutor draws out aspects of his unique voice, while Eigen evokes creative response from those who interview him. A book to read for pleasure and inspiration. -Donna M. Orange, NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis; IPSS (Institute for the Psychoanalytic Study of Subjectivity) This book gives us a wonderful insight into one of the most brilliant psychoanalysts of all time. A crossroads may give us a nice metaphor of his works. A psychoanalyst who stands in such a place, debating his path, is going neither in one direction or the other: he is literally betwixt and between. This is why, in Mike Eigen's writings and speech, one can recognize a caesura that is not just a paradox, but a space for a deep-thinking performance and quite poetic metaphors, the great substances of his thoughts. -Arnaldo Chuster, M.D., training and teaching analyst, Rio de Janeiro Psychoanalytical Society, Brazil; author of A Lonesome Road: Essays on the Complexity of Bion's Work (2014) Dialogues with Michael Eigen give room to an exceptional dialogue with the reader, who gets more and more involved in a companionship with the author's journey along the years as a psychoanalyst with traumas and psychosis. Each chapter makes us feel at home not only with his books, but with a unique rhythm, between negativity and creativity, individual trials and social forces. They progressively open doors to unexpected sources of life linked to contemporary issues and to the land of the sacred. As psychoanalysis is also an oral tradition, I particularly appreciated the oral style, full of wit and humor, while deepening my reflection. Following Bion's advice to psychoanalysts, `you work with your personality', Michael Eigen awakens the reader with great generosity. -Francoise Davoine, author of History Beyond Trauma (2004) `Dialogues with Michael Eigen represents an extraordinary opportunity to listen to the voice of one of the most influential and internationally respected authors of contemporary psychoanalysis. In this case the form of the interview introduces the reader to a pleasant and fruitful conversation with him. The plurality of topics addressed, the original perspectives in which they are set, the interweaving with personal history, the advantage given by the experience of many years of clinical work, teaching and writing, make this book a mandatory reading for psychoanalysts and psychotherapists. No less extraordinary are the portraits of a whole gallery of pioneers of psychoanalysis, from Freud to Jung, from Klein to Bion; from Winnicott to Laing and so on. Beyond the possibility of exploring again the themes dear to the Author, and already exposed in the many volumes of his prolific activity as a writer, in these dialogues, which cover a period of time of eighteen years, the human qualities of Michael Eigen emerge more vividly and directly: discipline, study, competence, creativity, curiosity at three hundred and sixty degrees for all that is vital inside and outside psychoanalysis. But then above all: wisdom, gentleness, humility, humanity, humor. Perhaps he would respond, in fact, as he does in the book to his interlocutor after a presentation, and as we can imagine, smiling and with a sparkle in his eyes: Now if I only knew the guy you're talking about ; or, on another page, After that introduction, I hope Michael Eigen shows up . I can assure readers that in this new book Michael Eigen does show up. And we are grateful to him.'-Giuseppe Civitarese, author, Sublime Subjects: Aesthetic Experience and Intersubjectivity in Psychoanalysis `For Michael Eigen's many faithful and avid readers, this book provides the singular pleasure of hearing him in conversation; for others, it will be a splendid introduction. Eigen's independent and generous psychoanalytic spirit allows him to hear in many registers, to engage and transmit a spiritually-inflected psychoanalysis without falling into dogma or exclusion. Each interlocutor draws out aspects of his unique voice, while Eigen evokes creative response from those who interview him. A book to read for pleasure and inspiration.'-Donna M. Orange, NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis; IPSS (Institute for the Psychoanalytic Study of Subjectivity) `This book gives us a wonderful scenario of one of the most brilliant psychoanalysts in all times. A crossroads may give us a nice metaphor of his works. A psychoanalyst who stands in such place, debating his path, is neither on one direction nor on the other: He is literally betwixt and between. This is why, in Mike Eigen's writings and speech, one can recognize a caesura that is not just a paradox, but a space for a deep-thinking performance and quite poetic metaphors, the great substances of his thoughts.'-Arnaldo Chuster, M.D., training and teaching analyst, Rio de Janeiro Psychoanalytical Society, Brazil; author, A Lonesome Road: Essays on the Complexity of Bion's Work `Dialogues with Michael Eigen give room to an exceptional dialogue with the reader, who gets more and more involved in a companionship with the author's journey along the years as a psychoanalyst with traumas and psychosis. Each chapter makes us feel at home not only with his books, but with a unique rhythm, between negativity and creativity, individual trials and social forces. They progressively open doors to unexpected sources of life linked to contemporary issues and to the land of the sacred. As psychoanalysis is also an oral tradition, I particularly appreciated the oral style full of wit and humor, while deepening my reflection. Following Bion's advice to psychoanalysts, you work with your personality , Michael Eigen awakens the reader with great generosity.'-Francoise Davoine, author, History Beyond Trauma Dialogues with Michael Eigen represents an extraordinary opportunity to listen to the voice of one of the most influential and internationally respected authors of contemporary psychoanalysis. In this case, the form of the interview introduces the reader to a pleasant and fruitful conversation with him. The plurality of topics addressed, the original perspectives in which they are set, the interweaving with personal history, and the advantage given by the experience of many years of clinical work, teaching and writing, make this book a mandatory reading for psychoanalysts and psychotherapists. No less extraordinary are the portraits of a whole gallery of pioneers of psychoanalysis, from Freud to Jung, from Klein to Bion, from Winnicott to Laing, and so on. As well as re-exploring in these dialogues, which cover a period of 18 years, the themes dear to the author already exposed in the many volumes of of his prolific writing, the human qualities of Michael Eigen emerge more vividly and directly: discipline, study, competence, creativity, curiosity at 360 degrees for all that is vital inside and outside psychoanalysis. But then above all: wisdom, gentleness, humility, humanity, humor. Perhaps he would respond, in fact, as he does in the book to his interlocutor after a presentation, and as we can imagine, smiling and with a sparkle in his eyes: 'Now if I only knew the guy you're talking about'; or, on another page, 'After that introduction, I hope Michael Eigen shows up'. I can assure readers that in this new book Michael Eigen does show up. And we are grateful to him. -Giuseppe Civitarese, author of Sublime Subjects: Aesthetic Experience and Intersubjectivity in Psychoanalysis (2017) For Michael Eigen's many faithful and avid readers, this book provides the singular pleasure of hearing him in conversation; for others, it will be a splendid introduction. Eigen's independent and generous psychoanalytic spirit allows him to hear in many registers, and to engage and transmit a spiritually inflected psychoanalysis without falling into dogma or exclusion. Each interlocutor draws out aspects of his unique voice, while Eigen evokes creative response from those who interview him. A book to read for pleasure and inspiration. -Donna M. Orange, NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis; IPSS (Institute for the Psychoanalytic Study of Subjectivity) This book gives us a wonderful insight into one of the most brilliant psychoanalysts of all time. An apt metaphor for his works might be a crossroads: a psychoanalyst who stands in such a place, debating his path, is going neither in one direction or the other; he is literally betwixt and between. This is why, in Mike Eigen's writings and speech, one can recognize a caesura that is not just a paradox, but a space for a deep-thinking performance and quite poetic metaphors, the great substances of his thoughts. -Arnaldo Chuster, M.D., training and teaching analyst, Rio de Janeiro Psychoanalytical Society, Brazil; author of A Lonesome Road: Essays on the Complexity of Bion's Work (2014) Dialogues with Michael Eigen give room to an exceptional dialogue with the reader, who becomes more and more involved in a companionship with the author's journey along the years as a psychoanalyst with traumas and psychosis. Each chapter makes us feel at home not only with his books, but with a unique rhythm, between negativity and creativity, individual trials and social forces. They progressively open doors to unexpected sources of life linked to contemporary issues and to the land of the sacred. As psychoanalysis is also an oral tradition, I particularly appreciated the oral style, full of wit and humor, while deepening my reflection. Following Bion's advice to psychoanalysts, 'you work with your personality', Michael Eigen awakens the reader with great generosity. -Francoise Davoine, author of History Beyond Trauma (2004) Author InformationMichael Eigen formerly directed an institute program for working with creative individuals at the Center for Psychoanalytic Training and was the first Director of Educational Training at the Institute for Expressive Analysis. He was on the Board of Directors at the National Psychological Association for Psychoanalysis for eight years, first as Program Chair, then as editor of The Psychoanalytic Review. In the past 20 years, he has taught and supervised mainly at the National Psychological Association for Psychoanalysis and the New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis. He gives a weekly private seminar on Winnicott, Bion, Lacan and his own work, ongoing for nearly 40 years. Loray Daws is a registered Clinical Psychologist in both South Africa and British Columbia, Canada. He is currently in private practice and serves as senior Faculty member at the International Masterson Institute in New York. He also serves as assistant editor for the Canadian Global Journal of Health Sciences, evaluator and international advisory board member for the International Journal of Psychotherapy, assistant editor for EPIS (Existential Psychoanalytic Institute and Society), and both teaches and supervises in South Africa, Australia, and Turkey in the psychoanalytic approach to disorders of the self. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |