In this book, prominent psychoanalysts discuss their prejudices about changing notions of the feminine and how it impacts their work.
Series Editor Foreword
Acknowledgements
Notes on Contributors
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Chapter 1: Introduction: Changing Notions of the Feminine: Confronting Analysts' Prejudices by Margarita Cereijido, PhD.
Chapter 2: From 'The Child Woman' to 'Wonder Woman': Progress and Misogyny in Psychoanalytic Theory and Clinical Work by Rosemary Balsam, MD.
Chapter 3: Reflections on the Evolving Role of Women as Partners and Mothers from the 1970s to the present by Graciela Abelin-Sas Rose, MD
Chapter 4: When Pain Takes Hold of the Dyad: Culture and the Construction of Compromise in the Female Psyche by Paula Ellman, PhD.
Chapter 5: Be Careful What You Wish For: A Psychoanalyst Reacts to the Liberation of Aggression in Women by Janice Lieberman, PhD.
Chapter 6: Motherhood and New Reproductive Techniques: An Overview of the Last Twenty-Five Years by Fanny Blanck-Cereijido, MD
Chapter 7: A Psychoanalyst's Changing Prejudices: Understanding Single Mothers by Choice in the 1980s and Today by Margarita Cereijido, PhD.
Chapter 8: Femininity: Transforming Prejudices in Society and in Psychoanalytic Thought by Nancy R. Goodman, Ph.D.
Chapter 9: Voiceless Heroines: Listening while saturated by theory by Irene Cairo, MD.
Chapter 10: "The Psychogenesis of a Case of Homosexuality in a Woman", Revisited by Julia Braun, MD.
Chapter 11: Gender and Cultural Sensitivity in Practice: A Consultation with a Moroccan Family by Carlos Sluzki, MD.