Clinical Storytelling, Art and the Problems of Being: The analyst's Necessary Vertigo
Book Announcement by Jade McGleughlin (USA)
McGleughlin, J. (2024). Clinical storytelling, art and the problems of being: The analyst’s necessary vertigo. Routledge.
In a series of overlapping clinical essays — sometimes highly personal, sometimes bristling with theory, sometimes employing experimental writing — Jade McGleughlin upends the ways we tell a psychoanalytic story.
Tracing the evolution of her thinking, the essays comprising Clinical Storytelling, Art and the Problems of Being: The Analyst’s Necessary Vertigo grapple with the problem of engaging patients when verbal representation fails. To do this, McGleughlin takes us inside some of her richest, most surprising encounters with patients who have suffered severe trauma, leading to a breach in the experience of self. McGleughlin imagines how to meet patients in the breach. She brings us along, requiring the analyst’s intense personal struggle to find and share the patients’ experiences of liminality, of terror, of non-existence — to tolerate the vertigo of deep engagement with the other. Rather than leading with authority and the illusion of an autonomous self, McGleughlin offers storytelling that mirrors the work; her enactive writing dares to replicate the unsettling experience of the breach and invites readers to experience not only seeing but being seen.
Drawing from film, literature, and art, including her own paintings, as well as extensive clinical experience, this book helps the reader understand how communication in a clinical space can transcend the verbal.
Jade McGleughlin, LICSW is past president, personal and supervising analyst, board member and faculty member of The Massachusetts Institute for Psychoanalysis. She is on the editorial boards of Psychoanalytic Dialogues and Studies in Gender and Sexuality. She is in private practice in Cambridge, MA, providing consultation, supervision, psychotherapy and psychoanalysis. Her writing focuses on gender, the negative, the analysts’ necessary nonsovereignty, experimental and ontological psychoanalytic writing, and uses of visual art to articulate problems in representation. She is a portrait painter.
Jade McGleughlin, LICSW
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
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