ABSTRACT
In this major contribution to contemporary psychoanalysis, Stanley Coen illuminates a heretofore undescribed character structure especially resistant to analytic process. Pathologically dependent patients, for Coen, are identified not by surface character traits, but by their response to the intrapsychic demands of analysis. Such patients remain in treatment, sometimes contentedly, sometimes amid rebukes and complaints, but they do not profit from it. Their inability to use insight, especially in the transference, is matched by a proclivity for sadomasochistic enmeshment. In analysis, this tendency translates into a continuing dependent attachment to the analyst.
In exploring the genetic roots of pathological dependency, Coen ranges beyond extant trauma theories in describing a pattern of parent-child interaction in which repetitive behavioral enactments substitute for the acceptance and resolution of conflicts, both intrapsychic and interpersonal. In analysis, pathologically dependent patients use the analyst as they have come to use significant others throughout their lives: as part of a defensive structure characterized by repetitive enactments and a refusal to face what is wrong with them. This "misuse of others" is infused with destructiveness, hostility, and rage, and the analyst necessarily becomes the object of these powerful emotions. With such patients, then, the road to therapeutic progress invariably passes through the analysis of mutual transferential and countertransferential hate, the patient's tempting invitations to collusion and avoidance notwithstanding.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part I: Background for the Study of Pathological Dependency
chapter 1|10 pages
Introduction
chapter 2|16 pages
What Is Pathological Dependency?
chapter 3|6 pages
What Is Destructiveness and Why Is It So Frightening in Dependency?
part |2 pages
Part II: The Inability to Manage Oneself
chapter 4|20 pages
Responsibility for Conflict and the Incapacity to Bear It
chapter 5|23 pages
Dependency and the Superego
chapter 6|20 pages
Repetition Versus Change
chapter 7|21 pages
The Sense of Defect
part |2 pages
Part III: The Need to Avoid Destructiveness
chapter 8|17 pages
Sexualization
chapter 9|16 pages
Superego Aspects of Entitlement
chapter 10|17 pages
Psychosomatic Avoidance of Conflict
part |2 pages
Part IV: The Pathological Need for the Other
chapter 11|15 pages
Some Problems for the Analyst in Analyzing Pathological Dependency
chapter 12|19 pages
The Excitement of Sadomasochism
chapter 13|19 pages
Perversion
chapter 14|17 pages
Pathological Jealousy
part |2 pages
Part V: Conclusion