Book Cover
Book
Author Rinsley, Donald B.

Title Borderline and other self disorders : a developmental and object-relations perspective / Donald B. Rinsley
Published New York : J. Aronson, [1982]
©1982

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  616.89 Rin/Bao  AVAILABLE
Description xiii, 322 pages ; 23 cm
Contents 1. Economic Aspects of Object Relations -- 2. The Role of the Mother -- 3. A View of Object Relations -- 4. Fairbairn's Object-Relations Theory -- 5. A Review of Etiology, Dynamics, and Treatment -- 6. Vicissitudes of Empathy -- 7. Altered States of Consciousness and Glossolalia -- 8. Object Constancy -- 9. Dynamic and Developmental Issues -- 10. Juvenile Delinquency -- 11. Borderline and Narcissistic Children and Adolescents -- 12. Object-Relations Theory and Psychotherapy -- 13. The Masterson-Rinsley Concept and Beyond -- 14. Fairbairn's Object Relations and Classical Concepts of Dynamics and Structure
Summary Dr. Rinsley's years of experience treating seriously disturbed children, adolescents, adults, and their families led him to understand the major personality pathology that lies midway along a developmental-diagnostic continuum between the psychoses and the psychoneuroses. Dr. Rinsley clearly delineates the borderline and other self disorders from a developmental viewpoint and suggests viable approaches to psychotherapy with these difficult, often elusive patients. He synthesizes of the work of Klein and Fairbairn from the British school of object relations, Jacobson and Kernberg on internalized object relations, Mahler on symbiosis and individuation, Bowlby on attachment and loss, Kohut on the psychology of narcissism and disorders of the self, Masterson on borderline object relations and the concept of abandonment depression, and Piaget on the development of cognitive-perceptual structure. The author places particular importance on the failure of communicative matching, mutual cueing or "goodness of fit" between mother and child, leading to the latter's disturbances. He shows that the basic therapeutic task is to provide the patient with a "good enough" or "holding" environment within the context of which explanation, confrontation, and interpretation may lead to the resolution of underlying pathologic determinants
Notes Includes index
Bibliography Bibliography: pages 271-303
Subject Borderline personality disorder.
Object relations (Psychoanalysis)
Personality disorders -- Etiology.
Separation-individuation.
LC no. 81020538
ISBN 0876684479
0876684843 (cover)
1568218478 ([pbk.])