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From the Other Side: Countertransference in Spanish-Speaking Dyads
Author(s) -
Rebeca Chamorro
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
psychoanalysis culture and society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.235
H-Index - 8
eISSN - 1543-3390
pISSN - 1088-0763
DOI - 10.1353/psy.2003.0006
Subject(s) - countertransference , psychology , psychoanalysis , psychotherapist
In her work on psychoanalysis with bilingual patients, Perez-Foster draws attention to the process of doing therapy in both English and Spanish. She describes patients’ access to early object-relations and powerful shifts in the transference as a result of language choice, specifically the greater possibility for transference enactments which might not otherwise occur or take longer in the secondary language. While she states that both patient and analyst are changed by this particular medium—i.e., use of the primary language—more focus is placed on the patient and less is mentioned about the subjective or countertransferential experience of the analyst. This paper will focus on the tensions and choices presented to the therapist as a result of the Spanishspeaking therapeutic coupling. Specifically, issues regarding the debate on the therapist’s self-disclosure, both inherent and at other times purposeful, will be illustrated. Thereafter, I will share the personal dimensions of doing this work and its interface with cultural dilemmas. Finally, the paper concludes with a clinical example that highlights the fluidity of word meanings and potential for and use of countertransferential enactments.

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