Transference Jung
Counter-transference from the therapist Jung as reported in Samuels 1989.
Transference jung. See also countertransference Unconscious contents are invariably projected at first upon concrete persons and situations. First coined by Freud in 1895 the concept of transference was identified by Freud in psychoanalysis. Freud recognized that his patients transferred a false connection 1 onto him without realising it consciously and without being able to control it.
Everyone who has had practical experience of psychotherapy knows that the process which Freud called transference often presents a difficult problemIt is probably no exaggeration to say that almost all cases requiring lengthy treatment gravitate round the phenomenon of transference and that the success or failure of the treatment appears to be bound up with it in a. By this he was referring to the content of the projections moving from the personal. Although Jung made contradictory statements about the therapeutic importance of the transference for instance.
In my opinion the most brilliant authors are those who can communicate complex ideas like transference in. Jung too saw transference as a projection onto the analyst projections that as the analysis continues are worked through and withdrawn. 3262020 Carl Jung Lexicon NYAAP Carl Jung on Transference Transference.
It is composed of different strands not all of which are erotic. This may seem an unnecessarily obscure way of looking at the transference yet it makes remarkable sense. The series of images begins with that of the mercurial fountain symbolizing the aroused energy of transformation and.
A particular case of projection used to describe the unconscious emotional bond that arises in the analysand toward the analyst. The Transference Phenomenon is an inevitable feature of every thorough analysis Carl Jung CW 16 Par. Although used to refer to this specific relationship dynamic in analysis transference is a very real dimension of all.
The erotic transference is always layered. Jung Education Center in Pittsburgh PA on February 3 1995. The patients erotic transference whether enacted within or outside treatment disguises a number of disparate and contradictory transferential strategies and aims.
