Abstract
I reflect on Larry Josephs and Jett Stone’s informative article (this issue), which provides a scholarly review of contempt and contempt management, theorizing links between contempt, shame, hierarchy, and power. The authors explore and illustrate how contempt/shame cycles can be enacted and worked with therapeutically. I value the project of deepening our understanding of an affective/interpersonal dynamic that often emerges in difficult clinical encounters in which contempt and shame are frequently tossed about like hot potatoes. While appreciating Josephs and Stone’s ideas, I reconsider the clinical material through my own relational lens (informed by object relational and developmental perspectives) and offer a second look, focusing on singular meanings and unique relational dynamics. I ask, in essence, “Whose contemptible object are we anyway?” Additionally, I discuss the authors’ contribution as it relates to a larger inquiry into the survival of destruction in psychoanalysis. I conclude by suggesting that this paper points to the importance of continually attending to power dynamics and the attendant risks of unconscious coercions in the mutual but asymmetric psychoanalytic encounter as relationally conceived.
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Amy Schwartz Cooney
Amy Schwartz Cooney, Ph.D., is on faculty at the NYU Post-Doctoral Program in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy, teaching Foundations of Relational Psychoanalysis. She is on the Board at NIP and is Faculty/Supervisor in the National Training Program. She is also Faculty/Supervisor at the Stephen Mitchell Center, Co-chair of the IARPP Colloquium Series, and Associate Editor of Psychoanalytic Dialogues. Her most recent work (Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 2018) focuses on Vitalizing Enactment. She is in private practice in NYC.