A classic examination of transference phenomena. Demonstrating a profound gift of empathy and self-observation, together with a brilliant clinical and theoretical grasp of the most complex and subtle phenomena, Racker.shows everywhere the close contact between theoretical knowledge and analytic practice. 203 pages.
Meh, Lacan said it better some 7 years before this was published.
I did like this anecdote:
"One day a Chinese wise man lost his pearls. He therefore sent his eyes to search for his pearls, but his eyes did not find them. Next he sent his ears to search for the pearls, but his ears did not find them either. Then he sent his hands to search for the pearls, but neither did his hands find them. And so he sent all of his senses to search for his pearls but none found them. Finally he sent his not-search to look for his pearls. And his not-search found them."
His non-search. His Aufsicht, to quote the original. But here it does not imply an error, Racker speaks of an oversight of a different nature - an absentminded omniscient, omnipresent and omnipotent "all-seeing eye" or view from the top. What Nietzsche called "becoming what one is". What Socrates what trying to teach through his analytic technique, knowing thyself. The wise man sent all of his senses and it still wasn't enough. He had to send the self to look for his pearls. And the self found them.
Timeless and still relevant today. A deep dive into the vicissitudes of transference. I really liked the focus Racker puts on the analyst's countertransference. Analysts are only human too