Winnicott: His Life And Work
By (Author) F. Robert Rodman
Hachette Books
Da Capo Press Inc
22nd September 2004
United States
General
Non Fiction
Psychoanalytical and Freudian psychology
616.8917092
Paperback
496
Width 232mm, Height 157mm, Spine 29mm
668g
His astonishing career involves many of the great figures in psychoanalysis and psychology, not just Klein and Anna Freud, but also the whole lively and eccentric Bloomsbury and analytic scene including the Stracheys, R.D. Laing, Jacques Lacan, Ronald Fairbairn, and the controversial Pakistani analyst and self-anointed prince Masud Khan. Of all those who have plumbed the human mind, Winnicott speaks most to us today because he wrote in understandable language about universal human concerns, attachment and separation, love and loss. Without jargon and yet with an overarching theory that extended the range of psychoanalytic thought, he puts us in touch with the everyday lives of all people from infancy to old age. Winnicott, in Dr. Rodman's magnificent portrait, is always himself, always human, always one of us. Anyone interested not only in psychology and psychoanalysis but also in human nature and the great figures who have explored it will find this book passionately absorbing.
"As balanced and insightful a portrait of Winnicott's ideas as we are likely to have." - Martha Nussbaum in The New Republic; 'Spacious, biographically rich, and without ideological blinkers...Rodman's work has not only recreated in documentary detail the life of one of the most creative people in the history of psychoanalysis, but also helped bring us up-to-date on the tale of what has been happening in Britain'. Psychoanalysis and History; 'As balanced and insightful a portrait of Winnicott's ideas as we are likely to have'. The New Republic; 'A comprehensive and revealing picture'. Journal of Social Work Education; Here is the story of an important English child psychoanalyst whose writings are a much needed breath of fresh air for all who work with, and try to understand children. Dr. Rodman writes with an exacting and deserved eloquence, knowing, as he does, why D.W. Winnicott's life work has mattered, and continues to matter, so much to so many. This book is a worthy companion to us readers, ever so needy, still, of Winnicott's inwardness, his moral presence'. Robert Coles, Harvard University"
Dr. F. Robert Rodman, an eminent psychoanalyst, is the author of Not Dying: A Memoir and Keeping Hope Alive: On Becoming a Psychotherapist, as well as a much-admired interpretive edition of Winnicott's letters, The Spontaneous Gesture. He practices in California.