The Power of the Inner Judge

Psychodynamic Treatment of the Severe Neuroses

By (author) Léon Wurmser

Hardback - £105.00

Publication date:

01 March 2000

Length of book:

356 pages

Publisher

Jason Aronson, Inc.

ISBN-13: 9780765701770

This book describes in detail how to effectively treat severely ill but not psychotic patients, by careful psychotherapeutic work on the defenses and the superego. Diverging widely from Kernberg's and Kohut's work with the same broad spectrum of patients, Léon Wurmser demonstrates his flexible and individualized method with clinical material taken directly from actual patient–therapist interaction. The core of the therapeutic work focuses on trauma; forms of defense; conflicts within the superego; and the related affects of guilt, shame, depression, and resentment. Appreciating the complex and individual nature of each case, the author uses the familiar concepts of masochism, aggression, narcissism, and repetition compulsion as descriptions, not explanations, of clinical observations. There are no shortcuts; a genuine understanding that results in real change for the patient requires an in-depth exploration of the material in a nonjudgmental atmosphere. Observing that categories, while necessary, tend to be slowly transformed into words of devaluation, Dr. Wurmser addresses the implicit, and often quite explicit, judgmental spirit directed toward severely ill patients, and cautions clinicians to avoid falling into the role of a judging authority. This is an eloquent accounting of a master therapist's successes and failures, valuable especially for offering effective and decisive interventions in treating traditionally untreatable patients.
Wurmser's erudition, theoretical knowledge, and clinical wisdom flow in his writing like an untappable Niagara. His resolve to conceptualize gives his latest book a new and welcome balance between conflict, trauma, and affect, productively borrowed from infant studies. The author is a humanist who brings fully to life the frequent inhumanity of the inner judge. Best of all, he has a unique way of conveying the chaos characteristic of the severe neuroses while making the dynamics understandable to the reader.