‘Opening remarks at a practical seminary’ by James Strachey

Translations of summary This manuscript, dated 1941, is a class on technique taught by James Strachey to first‐year candidates at the British Psychoanalytical Society (BPS), located in the Archives of BPS. As the last of three written manuscripts on transference interpretation, it offers an opportunity to trace the development and subtle shift in Strachey's thinking following his 1934 paper (Strachey, , ). The lecture is striking in its precise language, and in the complexity of the issues discussed. Through the use of an optical metaphor, the magic lantern, Strachey illustrates transference, what is therapeutic about a transference interpretation and describes projective identification and some aspects of counter‐transference without naming them as such. Strachey makes a persuasive case for careful attention being paid to the analytic situation, the “artificially simplified relationship between analyst and patient” with systematic comparison to psychotherapeutic techniques of support and reassurance, which he argues lead to only temporary and limited results. The author argues that Strachey continues to be influenced by Klein's developmental, technical, and object relational theories as was already evident in his 1934 paper. Extrait des archives : “Remarques introductives à un séminaire sur la pratique”, par James Strachey Ce manuscrit, daté de 1941, est un cours de technique enseigné par James Strachey à des candidats de première année, à la Société b...
Source: The International Journal of Psychoanalysis - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Tags: Archival Studies Source Type: research