The Client and the Therapist from Contemporary Kleinian and Bion s Thought Lee, Harriot DOI 10.23905/kspcc.29..201711.007 2017
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The Client and the Therapist from Contemporary Kleinian and Bion s Perspectives Lee, Harriot Associate Professor Korea Nazarene University Cheonan, Korea The psychoanalytic therapy session has evolved into a process of sharing unconscious emotions here and now, encountering ceaselessly emerging and vanishing others in the intersubjective dynamic of transference countertransference and container contained. This study started with a basic question: who really is the client and who is the therapist in the psychoanalytic session. Questions of how these two people exist, who they are to each other, and what they do in this analytic field were explored from the perspectives of Wilfred Bion and contemporary Kleinian thought. The client was explored on four different issues: client possessed by others, client surviving through controlling others, client as an unconscious infant-self, client as an interpreter/supervisor of the therapist. The therapist was also explored on four different issues: Therapist as a role player, therapist as an unconscious infant-self, therapist as a background presence, therapist as a hostage. Therapeutic approaches to each of the issues were discussed. Clinical vignettes were given to illustrate the issues concerned. Emmanuel Levinas, who proclaimed ethics to bear responsibility for answering the callings of others, was invited for a dialogue with Bion to show that contemporary psychoanalysis can deepen and enrich pastoral counseling.