“Whether the wish is to know oneself more deeply, to understand better the psychoanalytic process, or simply to immerse oneself in seamless, elegant prose, Philip Bromberg's Awakening the Dreamer is enormously satisfying. Besides showing that the analyst's thoughtful self-revelation is not simply permissible, but actually necessary in the analytic process, Bromberg makes salient connections between leading-edge work in affective neuroscience and the relational psychoanalytic tradition he helped create. A nearly effortless read, Dreamer places the reader inside the minds both of a master clinician and of his patients.”
- Richard A. Chefetz, M.D., Past President, International Society for the Study of Dissociation
“Philip Bromberg's gift is to put himself right 'out there' in the therapeutic encounter without the standard ‘technical’ body armor of psychoanalysis. He emphasizes instead the analyst's genuine involvement both as a source of insight and as a guiding frame for the clinical work. His core ideas relating to dissociation, self disclosure, and enactment are compatible with current research in neuroscience and in the psychology of emotion; indeed they help bridge the gap between psychoanalysis and these fields. In Awakening the Dreamer, Bromberg’s gift of emotional connection extends to his brilliant series of clinical illustrations; they engage readers in a way that enables them to participate in the process and not merely to observe it.”
- Wilma Bucci, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, Derner Institute, Adelphi University
“This extraordinary and beautiful book explicates how one mind reads another and why the mind-brain is intrinsically relational.”
- Leston Havens, M.D., Harvard Medical School
"Bromberg is a gifted clinical writer with a vivid style that conveys with immediacy the analytic encounter. His theoretical exposition is poetical, drawing liberally from literary sources and from his own autobiographical recollections."
- Melvin Lansky, Ph.D., International Journal of Psychoanalysis
"Bromberg’s book assembles a whole new way of thinking about what we are doing within the therapeutic relationship - a way that accounts for moment-to-moment affective contact in our attempts to interpret transference and countertransference. It might be even more fun to read Awakening the Dreamer with some colleagues and talk about how it impacts all of you in your clinical work. I guarantee it will be a lively and revealing conversation."
- Polly Young-Eisendrath, Ph.D., Psychologist-Psychoanalyst
"Awakening the Dreamer is a stimulating and important book that is fascinating to read. To classically trained clinicians who are open to having their basic assumptions challenged, and who want to learn about the current thinking of a highly experienced relational psychoanalyst, I strongly recommend it."
- John L. Frank, Ph.D., Psychoanalytic Quarterly
"Every chapter in the book, each of which stands out on its own as a well-crafted and valuable contribution to the literature, holds the prism of dissociation to the light, reflecting its many facets as they pertain to development, psychopathology, and psychoanalytic treatment. The appeal of this book to clinicians from a multiplicity of theories also lies in Bromberg's encompassing grasp of ideals embraced by stances ranging from interpersonal psychology, self psychology, object relations, intersubjective systems theory, complexity theory, cognitive psychology, and relational perspectives, to theories of trauma and dissociation. It would appear that Bromberg has created a work as multifaceted as the patients he writes about the clinicians for whom he writes."
- Nancy VanDerHeide, Ph.D., International Journal of Psychoanalytic Self Psychology 3.4, 2008
The Dissociative Mindmore information about The Dissociative Mind
Relational Psychoanalysis 3 Volume SetOver the course of the past 15 years, there has been a vast sea change in American psychoanalysis. It takes the form of a broad...
more information about Relational Psychoanalysis 3 Volume Set
Bodies In TreatmentBodies in Treatment is a challenging volume that brings into conceptual focus an "unspoken dimension" of clinical work - the body and nonverbal communication -...
more information about Bodies In Treatment