This fascinating volume explores — from the perspective both of analysts and their patients—how the COVID-19 pandemic quickly and unexpectedly created profound and lasting changes in the ways psychoanalysis is conducted, and what those changes mean for analysis moving forward.
The first part of the book is made up of interviews conducted by Stefano Carpani with authoritative authors in analytical psychology during the earliest phase of lockdown, centered on themes of the pandemic, lockdown, and how each individual was coping with the challenges those circumstances brought on. The second part features personal essays that further details the subjective experiences of Jungian analysts and therapists worldwide, comprising a collection of reflections on how COVID-19 affected and changed the way analysts work with patients. These reflections focus on the theoretical, clinical, technical, and also practical points of view, including clinical materials on transference and counter-transference considerations. The third part of the book is specular to the second and offers reflections from patients’ perspective on how the pandemic changed their therapies and lockdown affected their experience of therapy. Patients have provided anonymous testimonies through their writing of how they experienced of the change of setting, mindset and related implications.
A comprehensive overview of an important and ongoing conversation, Lockdown Therapy is crucial reading for Jungian analysts and scholars, as well as other clinicians training in analysis, psychotherapy and counselling.
Table of Contents
Preface
Misser Berg
Introduction: The Suspension of Certainties
Stefano Carpani & Monica Luci
Part I
1. Spring and Imagination
Verena Kast
2. Nature and Death
Murray Stein
3. Illness as Metaphor
Paul Attinello
4. Compensation
John Beebe
5. The Suspension of Time
Davide Favero & Stefano Candellieri
6. Psychosocial Perspectives and Covid 19
Andrew Samuels
7. The Suspension of Certainties
Susan Rowland
8. Fraternitè
Ursula Brasch
9. Nightmares
Renate Daniels
Part II
10. How I Was Affected by Covid-19 in my Practice
Misser Berg
11. Are You There? Disconnection Entering the Analytical Space
Olivia del Castillo
12. One Other Contagion in the Time of Coronavirus
Dan Cross
13. Covid-19: Impressions, Sidelights, and Thoughts from the Psychotherapeutic Practice
Renate Daniel
14. Poetry as a Personalized Lockdown Therapy
Roula Maria Dib
15. Presence and Absence of the Body in Psychotherapy During Lockdown
Paolo Ferliga
16. What Does the Virus Do to the Analytic Container? Thoughts on the Frame in Times of Pandemic
Daniela Eulert-Fuchs
17. Lockdown Therapy: What the Virus Gives and Takes Away
Roberto Grande
18. How Are You? The Mystery of Communication Between Alone-nesses
Emilijia Kiehl
19. Psyche and the Speed of Life: Jungian Reflections on the Pandemic
Milena Sotirova-Kohli
20. To Touch and To Be Touched: On Affection, Infection and Contagion: An Analysis of the Analytic Ethic Reimagined Through Coronavirus
Tiffany Houck-Loomis
21. Jungian Analysts’ Experiences of Working Online
John Merchant
22. Saying “Goodbye” Over Zoom: On Termination During Covid
Jon Mills
23. Impact of the Pandemic on my Therapeutic Practice
Marianne Müller
24. Living in the Shadow of War
Ruth Williams
25. Home, Sweet Home
Tine Papič
26. The Expanded Container: Analysis in a Pandemic
Nancy Robinson-Kime
27. Facing Suffering, Compassion and Tranformation
Heyong Shen
28. Online Therapy: The New Normal?
Pia Skogemann
29. Is the Genie Out of the Bottle? The Impact of the Pandemic on Analytic Process and Analytic Training
Mark Winborn
30. Accelerations and decelerations: Individuation at Pandemic Speed
Luciana Ximenez
Part III
31. ‘Me and My Therapist are Bodies in Space, Or: Embodied Sliding on the Ego-Self Axis
J. F.
32. Coming and Going
K. E. K.
33. A Personal Experience of Therapy During Covid-19 Pandemic
M. S.