Teicholz's examination of what she terms two overlapping "partial revolutions" in psychoanalysis - that of Kohut and Loewald on one hand and of the postmoderns on the other - throws an illuminating searchlight on the path psychoanalysis has traveled over
Introduction: The Absent Authority and the Ever-Present Subjectivity of the Author. Part I: Kohut's and Loewald's Writings as Finale to the Modern and Overture to the Postmodern. The One-Half and Three-Quarters Revolutions: The Shift From Modern to Postmodern in Psychoanalysis. Kohut and Loewald: Waystations on the Road to the Postmodern. The Intellectual Climate of Kohut's Time and the Modern/Postmodern Duality of His Self Psychology. Part II: Kohut's and Loewald's Ideas and the Postmodern Response. The Self in Kohut's Work and in Postmodern Discourse. Kohut's Concept of Selfobject. Part III: Postmodern Trends in Psychoanalysis. A Dual Shift in Psychoanalytic Focus: Self to Subjectivity, Analysand to Analyst. The Expression of the Analyst's Subjectivity: A New Guiding Principle of Psychoanalytic Technique? Intersubjectivity in Psychoanalysis: Major Contributions to a Multifaceted Concept. Intersubjectivity: Implications for the Psychoanalytic Situation. The Impact of Feminist and Gender Theories on Psychoanalysis: The Interface with Self Psychology and the Moderate Postmoderns. Part IV: Kohut, Loewald, and the Postmoderns at Century's End. Theories Old and New.