Bodies and Social Rhythms: Navigating Unconscious Vulnerability and Emotional Fluidity

IF 0.5 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, PSYCHOANALYSIS
D. Goldin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

As I write this, I am listening to Miles Davis’ On the Corner, a jazz ode to New York City street life just this side of dissonant. I put it on because Knoblauch’s Bodies and Social Rhythms, for all its academic rigor, is drenched in jazz and informed by the streets of New York City, both of which are all about rhythm, syncopation and the unpredictable rise and fall of affective energy, often to the exclusion of symbolic meaning. Jazz, New York City and infant research (Knoblauch co-wrote Forms of Intersubjectivity in Infant Research and Adult Treatment with Beatrice Beebe, Knoblauch, Rustin & Sorter, 2005) comprise a kind of fluid foundation for this work, perhaps of greater importance than the more solid-seeming architecture of psychoanalysis, which tends to loom over the nonsymbolic register of experience in a superior way. Beginning in the 1970s, Daniel Stern (1985) used a video camera to record the interactions of mothers and infants, allowing for the first time a micro-, frame-by-frame analysis of what goes on in these temporally tight sequences. A world opened up of nonverbal but meaningful communication, as surprising as the world of cells and invisible organisms that came into view only after the invention of the microscope. Psychoanalysis has taken note of this “something-more-thaninterpretation” aspect of our analytic conversations but has not found a good way to describe this new knowledge. Most attempts to apply these discoveries from infant research to adult analysis have tended to rely on the abstract language of dynamic systems theory, a choice of tone that to this reader contradicts the argument for their clinical relevance. Steven Knoblauch attempts to fill that gap with his careful slow-motion descriptions of real clinical situations he has lived through rather than observed.
身体和社会节奏:导航无意识的脆弱性和情感流动性
当我写这篇文章的时候,我正在听迈尔斯·戴维斯的《在街角》,一首歌颂纽约街头生活的爵士乐,就在不和谐的这一边。我之所以戴上它,是因为诺布劳赫的《身体与社会节奏》虽然学术严谨,但却浸透着爵士乐的气息,并受到纽约街头的影响,这两本书都是关于节奏、切分音和情感能量不可预测的起落,往往排除了象征意义。爵士乐、纽约市和婴儿研究(Knoblauch与Beatrice Beebe合著了《婴儿研究和成人治疗中的主体间性形式》,Knoblauch, Rustin & Sorter, 2005)构成了这项工作的一种流动基础,可能比精神分析学更坚固的结构更重要,后者倾向于以一种优越的方式隐约出现在非象征性的经验中。从20世纪70年代开始,丹尼尔·斯特恩(Daniel Stern, 1985)用摄像机记录了母亲和婴儿之间的互动,首次对这些短暂的紧密序列进行了逐帧的微观分析。一个非语言但有意义的交流的世界打开了,就像显微镜发明后才出现的细胞和看不见的有机体的世界一样令人惊讶。精神分析学已经注意到我们的分析对话中这种“比解释更重要的东西”的方面,但还没有找到一个好的方法来描述这种新知识。将这些发现从婴儿研究应用到成人分析的大多数尝试都倾向于依赖于动态系统理论的抽象语言,这种语调的选择对读者来说与他们的临床相关性相矛盾。Steven Knoblauch试图填补这一空白,他对自己亲身经历而非观察到的真实临床情况进行了细致的慢动作描述。
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来源期刊
Psychoanalysis Self and Context
Psychoanalysis Self and Context PSYCHOLOGY, PSYCHOANALYSIS-
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
33.30%
发文量
1
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