In his foundational work The Restoration of the Self , noted psychoanalyst Heinz Kohut boldly challenges what he called "the limits of classical analytic theory" and the Freudian orthodoxy.
He is the author of many books, including How Does Analysis Cure? and The Curve of Life , both published by the University of Chicago Press.. "Kohut speaks clearly from his identity as a psychoanalyst-healer, showing that he is more of a psychoanalyst than most, and yet calling for major theoretical revisions including a redefinition of the essence of psychoanalysis."-- American Journal of Psychotherapy About the Author: Heinz Kohut (1913-81) was professorial lecturer in psychiatry at the University of Chicago and president of the American Psychoanalytic Association.
This volume puts forth some of Kohut\'s most influential ideas on achieving emotional health through a balanced, creative, and joyful sense of self.
Using clinical data, Kohut explores issues such as the role of narcissism in personality, when a patient can be considered cured, and the oversimplifications and social biases that unduly influenced Freudian thought.
Here Kohut proposes a "psychology of the self" as a theory in its own right--one that can stand beside the teachings of Freud and Jung.
In his foundational work The Restoration of the Self , noted psychoanalyst Heinz Kohut boldly challenges what he called "the limits of classical analytic theory" and the Freudian orthodoxy