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Whether you’re looking for answers, would like to solve a problem, or just want to let us know how we did, we are always happy to hear from you.
Whether you’re looking for answers, would like to solve a problem, or just want to let us know how we did, we are always happy to hear from you.
Phoenix Publishing House
62 Bucknell Road, Bicester
Oxfordshire OX26 2DS
United Kingdom
Email: hello@firingthemind.com
Phone: +44 (0)20 8442 1376
62 Bucknell Road, Bicester
Oxfordshire OX26 2DS
United Kingdom
+44 (0)20 8442 1376
hello@firingthemind.com
Whether you’re looking for answers, would like to solve a problem, or just want to let us know how we did, we are always happy to hear from you.
£6.99 – £25.00
Couple and Family Psychoanalysis is an international journal sponsored by The Tavistock Institute of Medical Psychology, which aims to promote the theory and practice of working with couple and family relationships from a psychoanalytic perspective.
CONTENTS
EDITORIAL by Jill Savege Scharff
ARTICLES
– Community Response to the Impact of COVID: Psychoanalytic crisis intervention with a couple by Elizabeth Palacios
DOI 10.33212/cfp.v12n1.2022.1
– Commentaries on Palacios’s paper by Graciela Abelin-Sas Rose
DOI 10.33212/cfp.v12n1.2022.14
and Leora Benioff
DOI 10.33212/cfp.v12n1.2022.18
– COVID-19, Catastrophic Lockdown, and a Couple Retreat by Joanne Brown
DOI 10.33212/cfp.v12n1.2022.22
– How Close is Too Close? Some thoughts on couple psychotherapy in a time of constricted living imposed by Covid by Kate Thompson
DOI 10.33212/cfp.v12n1.2022.39
– To Gaze beyond the Screen: Appreciating the communicative function of mise en scène in online psychotherapy by Pierre Cachia
DOI 10.33212/cfp.v12n1.2022.53
– Inside Out and Outside In: Exploring the interplay between social and psychic structures in the pandemic era by Andi Pilecki Eliza-Christie
DOI 10.33212/cfp.v12n1.2022.69
BOOK REVIEWS
– Psychoanalysis and Covidian Life: Common Distress, Individual Experience edited by Howard B. Levine and Ana de Staal – reviewed by Caroline Sehon
– Freud’s Pandemics. Surviving Global War, the Spanish Flu, and the Nazis by Brett Kahr – reviewed by Christopher Clulow
– Psychoanalytic Work with Families and Couples: Clinical Perspectives on Suffering by Susana Kuras Mauer, Sara Moscona and Silvia Resnizky – reviewed by James Poulton
– The Curiosity Drive: Our Need for Inquisitive Thinking by Philip Stokoe – reviewed by Robert Monzo
ARTS REVIEWS
– Good Grief, by Lorien Haynes, directed by Natalie Abrahami, streamed at Original Theatre Online – reviewed by Elle Sidel
– Singer Rita Antonopoulou and guitarist Manolis Androulidakis, outdoor concert at the Pedion Areos Park, Athens, June 2021: A personal experience – reviewed by Nora Tsatsas
CONFERENCE REPORTS
– 9th International Congress of the International Association of Couple and Family Psychoanalysis (IACFP): “Advances in couple and family psychoanalysis in the contemporary world.” by Anne Anttonen
– 9th International Congress of the International Association of Couple and Family Psychoanalysis, and first International E-Congress: “The Irrepresentable.” by Rosa Jaitin
THE 2021 SIGOURNEY AWARD
David Scharff and Jill Savege Scharff
Editor-in-chief | Christopher Clulow |
---|---|
Page Extent | 128 |
Publication Date | March 2022 |
DOI | |
ISSN | 2044-4133 |
e-ISSN | 2044-4141 |
Couple and Family Psychoanalysis is an international journal sponsored by Tavistock Institute of Medical Psychology, which aims to promote the theory and practice of working with couple and family relationships from a psychoanalytic perspective. It seeks to provide a forum for disseminating current ideas and research and for developing clinical practice. The annual subscription provides two issues a year and includes complimentary online access from Ingenta Connect to current and past issues.
Reasons to subscribe:
– An established journal, listed by PEP, that brings together the interests of all professionals who work with couples and families and draw on a psychoanalytic perspective;
– An international journal, bringing together contributions from around the world;
– An innovative journal that critically reviews and discusses developments in practice, research, and literature, as well as providing lively and topical books and arts reviews;
– A professional journal with authoritative articles from established and new authors. First-time authors are especially encouraged with advice on preparing papers for publication;
– A welcoming journal offering a forum for those seeking a closer connection with others in their field.
Christopher Clulow, Editor-in-chief
Joanne Brown
Julie Friend
Brett Kahr
Molly Ludlam
Damian McCann
Perrine Moran, Arts Reviews Editor
Susana Muszkrat
Elizabeth Palacios Garcia
James Poulton
Lorna Robinson, Book Reviews Editor
Caroline Sehon
Kate Thompson
Christopher Vincent
Monica Vorcheimer
Janine Wanlass
INTERNATIONAL ADVISORY BOARD
Susanna Abse (United Kingdom)
Anne Antonnen (Finland)
Carl Bagnini (United States)
Jenny Berg (Australia)
Barbara Bianchini (Italy)
Bernd Boettger (Germany)
Sally Box (United Kingdom)
Diana Diamond (United States)
Peter Fullerton (Australia)
Kathleen Hanley (South Africa)
David Hewison (United Kingdom)
Anne Husser (France)
Julia Jastrzębska (Poland)
Nestor Kapusta (Austria)
Timothy Keogh (Australia)
Joyce Lowenstein (United States)
Hanni Mann-Shalvi (Israel)
Julia Meyerowitz-Katz (Australia)
Fabio Monguzzi (Italy)
Mary Morgan (United Kingdom)
Shelley Nathans (United States)
Anna Maria Nicolò (Italy)
Tatiana Onikova (Russia)
Adrian Perkel (South Africa)
Judith Pickering (Australia)
Karen Proner (United States)
Gullvi Sandin (Sweden)
Jill Savege Scharff (United States)
Lea Setton (Panama)
David Scharff (United States)
Carla Trusty-Smith (United States)
Yolanda de Varela (Panama)
Giulio Cesare Zavattini (Italy)
This international journal is sponsored by The Tavistock Institute of Medical Psychology.
Couple and Family Psychoanalysis aims to promote the theory and practice of working with couple and family relationships from a psychoanalytic perspective. It seeks to provide a forum for disseminating current ideas and research and for developing clinical practice.
We welcome contributions, whether full papers, shorter review articles or letters on subjects relevant to the Journal. Such subjects may include clinical case studies, theoretical perspectives, literature reviews, historical contributions, qualitative research, clinical training and supervisory practice, policy, and service developments.
These instructions apply to all contributors to the journal, whether the submission is for a general issue, a special issue, or the New Writer Prize.
1. Guidelines
Language: Contributions should be written in British English. Non-discriminatory language is mandatory.
Style: Footnotes and endnotes will be accepted only under exceptional circumstances.
References should be compiled using the publisher’s house style, which is based on APA 6th Edition. Full details can be found here.
Abstracts and keywords: Structured abstracts of up to 200 words and up to five keywords are required for all original papers submitted.
Headings: Section headings should be concise.
Originality: Papers submitted for publication should not have been published elsewhere or be currently submitted to other publications.
Confidentiality and consent: Contributors must comply with the ethical guidelines of their professional association(s) when writing about those who use their services.
Peer Review: All original papers will be subject to peer review.
Copy Dates: Whilst the journal welcomes contributions at any time, authors should note that final copy dates for forthcoming issues will normally be on January 1st and July 1st of each year.
Word count: Original papers should be 4,000-8,000 words; Debate up to 3,000 words; Review article up to 4,000 words; Report up to 2,000 words; Arts review up to 2,000 words; Book review up to 2,000 words; Obituary up to 2,000 words. Authors should include a word count with their paper. The word count (which includes all text including the abstract, article, references, notes, tables, figures, etc.) should appear at the end of the paper.
Font: Manuscripts must be supplied in Microsoft Word in Times New Roman 12-point font, double-spaced throughout, including the references.
2. Infographics
You are welcome to include figures, images/illustrations, or tables in your submission, but the following must be observed:
• All graphics must be supplied in their original format, either as digital artwork or statistical data.
• Any graphics copied from the internet and cited from other publications are not acceptable on their own.
• Graphics files must be supplied separately to text. Please do not embed graphics in the text file.
• Figures should be numbered in the order in which they appear in the paper (e.g. Figure 1, Figure 2).
• Each figure should include a title caption and full source e.g. Figure 1 The incidence of mental health issues in the UK adult population, World Health Organization, Report on World Mental Health Issues, 2013.
• The filename for the graphic should be descriptive of the graphic, e.g. Figure1, Figure2
• Avoid the use of colour and tints for purely aesthetic reasons.
• All figures will be reproduced in black and white.
3. Reproduction of copyright material
As an author, you are required to secure written permission for the use of all previously published material that is in copyright:
• if you want to reproduce any figure or table (including where you have created a new figure or table which derives substantially from a copyrighted source);
• if you use more than one line of a short poem, or a few lines from a long one, or any words or music of a copyrighted song;
• if you quote more than 500 (cumulative) words from the same book, or 300 cumulative words from the same article of paper, or use a sentence or more as an epigraph (i.e. where there is no discussion of the author’s work).
Where no permission is required, the original work must be clearly defined and attributed to the original source. This applies to direct reproduction as well as “derivative reproduction” (where you have created a new figure or table which derives substantially from a copyrighted source).
4. Copyright and authors’ rights
Copyright rests with Phoenix Publishing House for the journal and with the individual authors for their contributions. Permission to reproduce any material from the journal by any means must be obtained from the publisher in writing. Authors are responsible for obtaining permission to reproduce copyright material from other sources.
5. Proofs
Manuscripts will be copy-edited for journal house style. Authors will receive the copy edited files with queries. At this point, no substantial changes can be made to the paper. Authors will also receive typeset page proofs for approval. It is essential that both edited files and proofs are checked and returned within 7 days.
6. Procedure for submission
Checklist: Before submitting your manuscript to the journal, please view the Final checklist for Phoenix journal articles here to ensure your submission follows house style.
Papers must be submitted via PubKit. Go to https://submission.pubkit.co/publisher/165/journal/813/login and log in to or create your account. Once you are registered, please submit your manuscript according to the instructions given.
7. Disclaimer
Couple and Family Psychoanalysis and its editors make every effort to ensure the accuracy of all the information contained in published issues. However, any views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and not the editors or the journal.
Enquiries
Enquiries about contributing to the journal may be addressed to the editor-in-chief at cfpeditor@tavistockrelationships.ac.uk
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