Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain...

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Object Relations Object Relations Theories Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman Dr. Geoff Goodman

Transcript of Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain...

Page 1: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

Object Relations Object Relations TheoriesTheories

Dr. Geoff GoodmanDr. Geoff Goodman

Page 2: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories

• A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address

• B. Previous exposure to object relations theories

• C. Course requirement

• D. Review of syllabus

Page 3: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

II. Theoretical and Historical Overview

• A. Freud

• B. Klein

• C. Mahler

• D. Kernberg

• E. Other important theoreticians

Page 4: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

Other Important Theoreticians

• 1. Fairbarn• 2. Sullivan• 3. Winnicott• 4. Guntrip• 5. Balint• 6. Jacobson• 7. Green• 8. Kohut

Page 5: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

III. What is Object Relations: Definitions

A. “Theories, or aspects of theories, concerned with exploring the relationship between real, external people and internal images and residues of relations with them, and the significance of these residues for psychic functioning” (Greenberg & Mitchell, 1983, p.12).

Page 6: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

Object Relations: Definitions Continued

B. Three definitions by Kernberg (1976a)1. Understanding present interpersonal relations

in terms of past ones 2. Construction of mental representations of dyadic

“self” and “object” relationshipsa. baby and mother relationshipb. triadic relationshipsc. multiple relationships within and outside of the family

Page 7: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

Object Relations: Definitions Continued

3. Specific approaches or theories

A. Kleinian school

B. British Independent school

C. Integrations of these two schools

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IV. Shared Assumptions of Most Object Relations Theories

A. Severe pathology has preoedipal origins (ages 0-3)

1. normal autistic phase

2. normal symbiotic phase

3. paranoid-schizoid position

4. depressive position

Page 9: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

Shared Assumptions of Most Object Relations Theories Continued…

• B. Object relations become increasingly complex over time

• C. Developmental stages are culturally invariant but can be distorted by personal experiences

• D. Early object relations repeated and fixed for life

Page 10: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

Continued…• E. Disturbances in object relations

predict forms of psychopathology

• F. Patient relations with therapists reflect healthy and pathological aspects of early relationship patterns

Page 11: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

V. Critiques of These Assumptions

A. Sexual and physical abuse and other types of trauma can produce severe psychopathology at later stages of development

1. early risk factors might still play a role

2. early resilience factors might still play a role

Page 12: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

Critiques Continued…• B. Different aspects of object relations can

increase in complexity or remain static • 1. capacity for investment in people• 2. capacity for investment in values and morals• 3. affect tone of relationship paradigms• 4. complexity of object representations (high for

BPD)• 5. understanding of social causality

Page 13: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

Critiques Continued…C. Non-Western views of the self1. Relational and collectivist, not individualistic2. Emphasis on conformity and fitting in rather

than distinguishing oneself3. “Psychoanalytic ideas will need to be

broadened considerably in order to encompass the very different early environments which infants and children from other cultures experience” (Fonagy & Target, 2003, p. 13).

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Critiques Continued…D. Effects of later life events on the

development of novel object relations (e.g., loss, romantic relationship)

E. Situational stressors can impact the development of psychopathology

F. Real aspects of therapist can powerfully affect the interaction structure of the therapist- patient relationship (see Keiha’s dissertation)

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VI. Dimensions of Variation in Object Relations Theories

A. The function of object relations

1. need-gratifying (drive theory)

2. object- seeking (systems theory)

3. controversy between perception of object relations as creation or re-creation of specific modes of relatedness with others vs. drive discharge

Page 16: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

Continued…4. Drive Theorists• A. Freud• B. Klein• C. Mahler5. Interpersonal theoristsA. SullivanB. FairbairnC. Bowlby

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B. Endogenous/exogenous role in object relations

1. heavy influence of sexual and aggressive drives2. heavy influence of real external events and

relationships3. controversy between perception of object

relations as drive-influenced distortions of real relationships (funhouse of mirrors) vs. accommodations to real relationships (reality--based perceptions)

4. transactional model--interactions of genetics and environment

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C. Developmental models used

1. stage theory--development along a fixed, unitary developmental line (fixation and regression)

2. pathways model--development can take many forms, both adaptive and maladaptive, based on a risk/resilience gradient

3. mixed models

Page 19: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

D. Goodness of human nature

1. “Guilty Man”- conflict produces psychopathology

2. “Tragic Man”- deficit produces psychopathology

3. controversy between failures of integration (conflict because of splitting) vs. failures of internalization (deficit because of failures in mirroring)

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VII. Specific Theorists that Illustrate These VariationsA. Melanie Klein

1. paranoid-schizoid position

2. depressive position

3. drive theorists who believe in infant’s capacity for inherent object-sucking

Page 21: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

Melanie Klein Continued…4. sexual and aggressive drives inevitably

distort the development of object relations (mother is infant in drag)

5. stage theory used but modified to accommodate positions that reflect moment-to-moment shifts in relating

6. psychopathology arises out of conflicts derived from good and bad mental representations

Page 22: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

B. John Bowlby1. secure attachment (B)2. anxious-avoidant attachment (A)3. anxious-resistant attachment (C)4. disorganized attachment (D)5. systems theorist who believed in

infant’s capacity for inherent object-seeking (attachment)

Page 23: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.

Bowlby Continued…6. infants accommodate lapses in caregiver

sensitivity and responsiveness to maximize experience of felt security (buildup of expectations based on procedural memories)

7. developmental pathways model used (A-B-C-D)8. psychopathology arises out of deficits in

caregiving and consequent defensive exclusion, cognitive disconnection, and segregated systems

Page 24: Object Relations Theories Dr. Geoff Goodman. I. Introduction to Object Relations Theories A. Obtain home, phone number, e-mail address B. Previous exposure.