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Original Article

From bastion to enactment: The ‘non‐dream’ in the theatre of analysis

Pages 699-719 | Accepted 05 Aug 2004, Published online: 31 Dec 2017
 

Abstract

In this paper, the author's objective is to discuss models that express what occurs in the analytical situation. He demonstrates how early models relating to painting and sculpture, to history and archaeology, develop into other models that refer to the relationship between two people. He studies in depth the Barangers analytical eld with its obstructive bastions as a background to understanding what is currently valued as intersubjectivity in psychoanalysis. The container contained model and the phenomenon of recruitment are also discussed. The author uses clinical material to demonstrate how these models are linked to enactment, and a study of this concept provides evidence of the importance of the visual image, the dream and non‐dream, the affective pictogram, as privileged aspects for the understanding and evolution of thought in the analytical process. Its importance leads to a proposal of a model that uses the theatre as a metaphor for the analytical process. In this model, analyst and patient both participate as characters in the scenes, and simultaneously as their co–authors. The analyst should also be responsible for the direction of scenes, as well as acting as critic. His task is to prevent obstructive conspiracies (the non‐dream) and new meanings for the scenes, thus allowing the development of new scenes and plots, and the enlarging of the mental universe.

1. Paper presented at: Marcas Identi. catorias del Psicoanalisis en Latinoamerica [Identifying markers of Latin American psychoanalysis], Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,18–9 June 2004. Translated by Daniel Hahn

1. Paper presented at: Marcas Identi. catorias del Psicoanalisis en Latinoamerica [Identifying markers of Latin American psychoanalysis], Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,18–9 June 2004. Translated by Daniel Hahn

Notes

1. Paper presented at: Marcas Identi. catorias del Psicoanalisis en Latinoamerica [Identifying markers of Latin American psychoanalysis], Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,18–9 June 2004. Translated by Daniel Hahn

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