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R**A
Wonderful introduction to Bion
I have read the introductions by the Symingtons and Bleandonu. I disagree with the negative review above. Of course, this is not a book for just anyone, you have to know freud and Klein for some extant before embarking on Bion through "A Beam of Intense Darkness". As an analysand of Bion, and someone who read every word of him, Grotstein explains Bion step by step, as a holographic thinker. Grotstein defines the penumbra of Bion's metatheory the "dream ensemble" which consist of α function, container-contained, P-S ↔ D, contact-barrier, caesura, transformation, L, H, and K linkages, and the Grid as isomorphic models, variations of one essence.Bion in short, created the ultimate abstraction for psychoanalysis conceptualizing it using mathematical signs, with α function as the basic function of the mind. The human mind needs truth as much as food in order to exist. Initially with the help of the mother and projective identification, the infant starts to absorb inner and outer reality, digesting it, metabolizing it, in the "gastrointestinal tract" of the mother, and gradually of the infant himself (Grotstein suggests that the infant is born with an innate primitive α function). All psychopathology derived from totally (psychotic personality) or partially (neurotic personality) unprocessed "thoughts (emotions) without a thinker" waiting to be dreamed in the analytic process with the crucial help of the analyst reverie who experience O, transforms it to K, enabling the analysand to introject it detoxified.Grotstein takes the reader and transforms him... After digesting this wonderful book one can start reading and metalizing Bion, transforming Bion's β elements to α elements.
C**R
A Stunning Tour de Force
This is a work of utter genius. No one else could have written it. Grotstein is one of the leading psychoanalysts of our time. His breath of knowledge across the schools of psychoanalysis as well as in many other fields may be unparalleled. Bion was Grotstein's analyst, and Grotstein has been studying this work for decades. Bion was a notoriously obscure writer. Some of his work such as Transformations is impenetrable. Grotstein does a beautiful job in not only making sense of Bion, but clarifiying, extending, elaborating and sometimes disagreeing with Bion's ideas. Grotstein is an original thinker in his own right. This book is not an easy introduction to Bion. It requires considerable fore-knowledge of psychoanalytic theory. I, for example, am a psychoanalyst. But for those with sufficient background, it is the definitive statement on Bion's oeuvre. I doubt anything better will ever be written.
P**D
A Beam of Intense Darkness: Wilfred Bion's Legacy to Psychoanalysis
my daughter loves this book
A**Y
What are you going to land on?
Wilfred Ruprecht Bion was a British psychoanalyst of the Kleinian variety, who along with the followers of Anna Freud, make up the two important successor schools of Sigmund Freud. Bion was the first Kleinian president of the British Psychoanalytical Society and was a pioneer in the study of group dynamics, having gained insights on group processes from his experiences as a tank commander in World War I. When World War II broke out, Bion found himself in the army medical corps treating "shell shocked" soldiers in experimental group psychotherapy sessions. He and his colleagues were also charged with developing methods of selecting officers who could best lead in combat and those methods are still used today in industrial-organizational psychology.Following World War II, Bion helped start the new Tavistock Institute of Human Relations and continued his psychoanalytic training with Klein while conducting research on group processes. Bion was a prolific although abstruse writer who authored 24 books and numerous articles between 1940 and his death in 1979. In the last 15 years of his career, he withdrew from research and focused exclusively on his psychoanalytic craft. He moved to California and devoted himself to treating patients and a few trainees, one of whom was James S. Grotstein.Grotstein's book is foremost a love letter to his analyst and mentor. With unabashed affection, he likens Bion to Plato, Socrates and even Prometheus, and assures us that although Bion's "ideas still remain below the tip of the iceberg for many," he will "bring these ideas to the surface to demonstrate their theoretical and clinical (practical) usefulness-hopefully in a reader-friendly way" (p. 4). But little biographical or any background information about Bion is provided; indeed Grotstein tells us straightaway that he will "scrupulously" avoid it. Readers unfamiliar with Bion may not even learn from this book that he was British. Grotstein also warns us that his book contains a sparseness of clinical examples, since it is "difficult to find clinical examples that would be clear and precise enough" (p.7). Still, he declares emphatically that this book is directed to the general public, designed to help the lay reader and non-psychoanalyst to better understand and appreciate Bion and his ideas. I wish he had done so.Grotstein jumps right away into elaborating and musing ("dreaming" as he calls it) on complex concepts from Bion, but he does not define or even introduce them first. The reader is left to go to other sources to find definitions of Bionian terms and concepts, and what is "reader-friendly" about that? How does that make the book one for public consumption?Grotstein's writing is complex at best and for much of the book is practically indecipherable. Take for example, this passage: "This latter idea, that of entelechy, prompts me to suggest the following: in my opinion, the Ideal Forms generate the infant's own rudimentary (yet to be further transformed) a-elements, which conjoin with the pre-processed sensory stimuli (Bion's 'B-elements') to form what I, along with Ferro, term 'balpha-elements' ('aB', or really, 'Ba': Ferro, 1999, p.47). The whole point here, I believe, is that (a) 'a' precedes 'B'; (b) the a-element may have an earlier beginning in the Ideal Forms, have already been conceived by a hypothesized Intelligence or Presence (Bion's and Meister Eckhart's 'god'), and exist on a gradient of transformational sophistication as it proceeds." (p.46)Believe me, reading that passage "in context" doesn't clarify a thing; the problem is that there too often seems to be no context. Prior to this passage, we are not told to which Ideal Forms he refers (e.g., Plato?) or what defines Bion's "B-elements." The thoughts appear to have sprung fully matured from the head of our author and right onto the page. Sadly, the majority of the book is like this. Grotstein admits that he has faced critiques before for his writing style, that he has been accused of being too "'Bionian'--that is, 'dense'-- in my style of writing" but that he has strived to make this volume "as explicit and as clarifying" as he could (p. 4). Rather, he cannot shake the habit of writing as did his master, whom he himself describes thus: "Bion's style of writing is unique, often maddening, without proper markings or guideposts to help you anticipate the next turn in the road of ideas he has privately chartered. Often he seems to speak apodictically, not sharing with the reader the provenance of his thought." (p. 11)There were several times while reading the book that I pictured Grotstein as the Dennis Hopper character in Apocalypse Now, excitedly, maniacally going on and on about Bion being a kind man, a wise man, and then:"One through nine, no maybes, no supposes, no fractions. You can't travel in space, you can't go out into space, you know, without, like, you know, uh, with fractions - what are you going to land on - one-quarter, three-eighths? What are you going to do when you go from here to Venus or something? That's dialectic physics."Indeed.*This is a condensed version of my review of the book in PsycCRITIQUES--Contemporary Psychology: APA Review of Books, 53(25), 2008.
O**A
at last someone who explained the Grid to me
a lived through, clear explanation, commentary and clarification of the sometimes obscure and very concise thoughts of Wilfred Bion. Delightful and very helpful when you want to understand what Bion is all about. Very much recommended.
F**O
Fascinating
Hard to read for a non-psychoanalyst but fascinating nevertheless. Love the concept of a beam of intense darkness. Written by a brilliant mind.
M**N
Enthusiastically occult.
None the wiser. Not an entry level text. You will need a fairly in depth and practiced knowledge of Freudian and Kleinian theory to get the most out of this book. All a bit occult but weirdly thought provoking, just not sure the thoughts provoked were those intended.
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