Book Announcement by Ravit Raufman (Israel)
Idiomatic Expressions and Somatic Experience in Psychoanalysis examines how verbal and non-verbal language is used in the consulting room, and how these different modes of communication interact to provide a more comprehensive picture of the patient’s relational world. This book, published by Routledge, is the product of a comprehensive research project exploring the affinity between idiomatic expressions and somatic behaviors and symptoms. Idiomatic expressions are viewed as bridging the gap between somatic sensations and mental experiences.
Ravit Raufman deals with one of the fundamental aspects in human life: the way our behavior is governed by unconscious primary experiences, suggesting methods by which to decipher patient behaviors that are apparently detached and unreasonable. The first part presents case studies of people who enact and revive verbal idiomatic expressions through their behavior. The second describes how therapists use non-verbal mechanisms, operating in their own minds, to understand their patients’ inner lives. Based on relational and inter-subjective approaches in psychoanalysis, the case studies illustrate the various ways in which the therapist’s subjective experience is “objectively” used to learn about patients’ subjective relational experience, so as to verbally formulate pre-verbal experiences. Raufman uses Freudian ideas regarding the affinity between somatic symptoms and verbal expressions to inform her contemporary relational perspective. The book combines scientific findings with a narrative style, including life stories of various individuals as well as a description of the therapist’s own subjective experience.
This book will appeal to clinical psychologists and psychoanalytic psychotherapists as well as anyone interested in understanding human psyche and behavior.
Ravit Raufman, Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist, group therapist and senior lecturer at the University of Haifa, Faculty of Humanity, Department of Hebrew and Comparative Literature, Israel. She also teaches at the Faculty of Education and Faculty of Social Welfare. She is Member of the Emili Sagol Creative Arts Therapies Research Center. Her research deals mostly with dreams, fairy tales, group therapy and relational psychoanalysis.
Ravit Raufman
University of Haifa, Israel
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