"Coming from afar" and "temporarily becoming the patient without knowing it": two necessary analytic conditions according to Ferenczi's later thought

Am J Psychoanal. 2014 Dec;74(4):302-12. doi: 10.1057/ajp.2014.28.

Abstract

In this paper the author discusses two points regarding Ferenczi's views of psychoanalysis. The first concerns the fact that analysts, like their patients, "come from afar" (a concept of Borgogno, 2011). The second, closely linked to the first, has to do with Ferenczi's belief that psychoanalytical knowledge is not intellectual but visceral, seeing that if analysts are to truly understand their patients they must first "take on" their suffering in such a way as to "become the patient." The author follows Ferenczi's progression along these two points through his whole oeuvre, from his first psychoanalytical writings to the Clinical Diary (1932a) of the last year of his life.

Publication types

  • Biography
  • Historical Article

MeSH terms

  • Countertransference
  • History, 20th Century
  • Humans
  • Hungary
  • Physician-Patient Relations
  • Psychoanalytic Theory*
  • Transference, Psychology

Personal name as subject

  • Sándor Ferenczi