Difference between revisions of "Treatment"

From No Subject - Encyclopedia of Psychoanalysis
Jump to: navigation, search
 
Line 1: Line 1:
treatment (cure)                  The  term   'treatment' designates the practice of
+
The  term 'treatment' (cure) designates the practice of [[psychoanalysis]] as opposed to the theory of psychoanalysis.
  
  PSYCHOANALYSis as opposed to the theory of psychoanalysis. Although the
+
Although the term  was inherited by psychoanalysis from medicine, it has acquired a specific meaning in Lacanian psychoanalytic theory which is quite different from the way it is understood in medicine.  
  
 +
In particular, the aim of psycho-analytic treatment is not seen by Lacan as 'healing' or 'curing' people in thesense of producing a perfectly healthy psyche.
  
 +
The clinical structures of neurosis, psychosis and perversion are seen as essentially 'incurable', and the aim of analytic treatment is simply to lead the analysand to articulate his truth.
  
 +
Lacan argues that the treatment is a process with a definite direction, a structural progression with a beginning, middle and end (see [[end of analysis]]).
  
 +
The beginning, or 'point of entry into the analytic situation', is a contract, or
 +
'pact', between analyst and analysand which includes the analysand's agreement to abide by the fundamental rule.
  
    term  was inherited by psychoanalysis from medicine, it has acquired                  a
+
Following the initial consultation, a series of face-to-face preliminary interviews take place.
  
specific meaning in Lacanian psychoanalytic theory which is quite different
+
These preliminary
 +
interviews have several aims.
  
    from the way it is understood in medicine. In particular, the aim of psycho-
+
Firstly, they enable a properly psychoanalytic
 +
symptom to be constituted in place of the vague collection of complaints often
 +
brought by the patient.
  
analytic treatment is not seen by Lacan as 'healing' or 'curing' people in the
+
Secondly, they allow time for the transference to
 +
develop.
  
    sense of producing    a perfectly healthy psyche. The clinical structures of
+
Thirdly, they permit the analyst to ascertain whether or not there is
 +
really a demand for psychoanalysis, and also to hypothesise about the clinical
 +
structure of the analysand.
  
    neurosis, psychosis and perversion are      seen  as essentially 'incurable', and
 
  
    the aim of analytic treatment is simply to lead the analysand to articulate his
 
  
    truth.
+
After the preliminary interviews, the treatment is no longer conducted face to face, but with the analysand reclining on a couch while the analyst sits behind him, out of the analysand's field of vision (the couch is not used in the treatment of psychotic patients).  
  
      Lacan argues that the treatment is a process with a definite direction, a
+
As he free associates, the analysand works through the signifiers that have determined him in his history, and is driven by the very process of speech itself to articulate something of his desire.
  
    structural progression with a beginning, middle and end (see END OF ANALYSIS).
+
This is a dynamic process which involves a conflict between a force which drives the treatment on (see [[transference]], [[desire of the analyst]]) and an opposing force which blocks the process (seee [[resistance]]).  
  
    The beginning, or 'point of entry into the analytic situation', is a contract, or
+
The analyst's task is to direct this process (not to direct the patient), and to get the process going again when it gets stuck.
 
 
    'pact', between analyst and analysand which includes the analysand's agree-
 
 
 
    ment to abide by the fundamental rule. Following the initial consultation, a
 
 
 
    series of face-to-face preliminary interviews take place. These preliminary
 
 
 
    interviews have several aims. Firstly, they enable a properly psychoanalytic
 
 
 
    symptom to be constituted in place of the vague collection of complaints often
 
 
 
    brought by the patient. Secondly, they allow time for the transference to
 
 
 
    develop. Thirdly, they permit the analyst to ascertain whether or not there is
 
 
 
    really a demand for psychoanalysis, and also to hypothesise about the clinical
 
 
 
    structure of the analysand.
 
 
 
      After the preliminary interviews, the treatment is no longer conducted face
 
 
 
    to face, but with the analysand reclining on a couch while the analyst sits
 
 
 
    behind him, out of the analysand's field of vision (the couch is not used in the
 
 
 
    treatment of psychotic patients). As he free associates, the analysand works
 
 
 
    through the signifiers that have determined him in his history, and is driven by
 
 
 
    the very process of speech itself to articulate something of his desire. This is a
 
 
 
    dynamic process which involves a conflict between a force which drives the
 
 
 
    treatment on (see TRANSFERENCE, DESIRE OF THE ANALYST) and an opposing force
 
 
 
    which blocks the process (see RESISTANCE). The analyst's task is to direct this
 
 
 
    process (not to direct the patient), and to get the process going again when it
 
 
 
    gets stuck.
 

Revision as of 00:30, 6 May 2006

The term 'treatment' (cure) designates the practice of psychoanalysis as opposed to the theory of psychoanalysis.

Although the term was inherited by psychoanalysis from medicine, it has acquired a specific meaning in Lacanian psychoanalytic theory which is quite different from the way it is understood in medicine.

In particular, the aim of psycho-analytic treatment is not seen by Lacan as 'healing' or 'curing' people in thesense of producing a perfectly healthy psyche.

The clinical structures of neurosis, psychosis and perversion are seen as essentially 'incurable', and the aim of analytic treatment is simply to lead the analysand to articulate his truth.

Lacan argues that the treatment is a process with a definite direction, a structural progression with a beginning, middle and end (see end of analysis).

The beginning, or 'point of entry into the analytic situation', is a contract, or 'pact', between analyst and analysand which includes the analysand's agreement to abide by the fundamental rule.

Following the initial consultation, a series of face-to-face preliminary interviews take place.

These preliminary interviews have several aims.

Firstly, they enable a properly psychoanalytic symptom to be constituted in place of the vague collection of complaints often brought by the patient.

Secondly, they allow time for the transference to develop.

Thirdly, they permit the analyst to ascertain whether or not there is really a demand for psychoanalysis, and also to hypothesise about the clinical structure of the analysand.


After the preliminary interviews, the treatment is no longer conducted face to face, but with the analysand reclining on a couch while the analyst sits behind him, out of the analysand's field of vision (the couch is not used in the treatment of psychotic patients).

As he free associates, the analysand works through the signifiers that have determined him in his history, and is driven by the very process of speech itself to articulate something of his desire.

This is a dynamic process which involves a conflict between a force which drives the treatment on (see transference, desire of the analyst) and an opposing force which blocks the process (seee resistance).

The analyst's task is to direct this process (not to direct the patient), and to get the process going again when it gets stuck.