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    Home Categories Psychotherapy Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy in China – Volume 3 Number 1 / Individual Articles
    Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy in China - Volume 3 Number 1 £6.99 – £25.00
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    Tales of Transformation: A Life in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis £20.99 – £37.99

    Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy in China – Volume 3 Number 1 / Individual Articles

    £6.99

    EDITORIAL INTRODUCTION
    David E. Scharff

    SECTION ONE: CULTURE AND PSYCHOANALYSIS

    Shame East and West: similarities, differences, culture, and self
    Michael Stadter and Gao Jun
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.1

    Chinese culture and psychoanalysis
    Peter Loewenberg
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.22

    Femininity and masculinity in Chinese culture
    Wang Huan
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.30

    Rereading Klein’s “Some reflections on ‘The Oresteia’”—the evolution of the mother-daughter relationship in four generations of Chinese women
    Xu Jianqin (Jane Xu)
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.50

    Commentary: “Rereading Klein’s ‘Some reflections on “The Oresteia” ’—the evolution of the mother—daughter relationship in four generations of Chinese women”, by Xu Jianqin (Jane Xu)
    Jill Savege Scharff
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.60

    SECTION TWO: POPULATION, TRAUMA, AND MENTAL HEALTH

    Editor’s introduction: Nicholas Eberstadt’s “China’s demographic prospects to 2040 and their implications: an overview”
    David E. Scharff
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.64

    China’s demographic prospects to 2040 and their implications: an overview
    Nicholas Eberstadt
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.66

    Traumatised women—organised violence
    Sverre Varvin and Eivor Lægreid
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.92

    SECTION THREE: CLINICAL MATTERS

    A family with oedipal dynamics
    Li Yanling
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.111

    Discussion: “A family with oedipal dynamics” by Li Yanling, with David E. Scharff
    Elizabeth Palacios
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.119

    Brief intervention with a Chinese family of a school-refusing fourteen-year-old girl
    David E. Scharff and Janine Wanlass
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.122

    The setting in online video psychotherapy
    Duan Haoning
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.135

    Discussion: “The setting in online video psychotherapy” by Duan Haoning
    Zhang Peichao
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.143

    SECTION FOUR: GOING ONLINE IN THE TIME OF COVID-19

    Driven to teletherapy
    Jill Savege Scharff
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.146

    On the use of teleanalysis during COVID-19 in Panama
    Yolanda Varela
    DOI 10.33212/ppc.v3n1.2020.154

    SECTION FIVE: BOOK REVIEWS

    Preface to the Chinese edition of The Matrix of the Mind: Object Relations and the Psychoanalytic Dialogue, by Thomas H. Ogden, translated by Yin Yiting
    Introduced by Thomas H. Ogden and Reviewed by Yin Yiting

    NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS

    INSTRUCTIONS TO CONTRIBUTORS

    LIST OF REVIEWERS

    Publication Date

    June 2020

    ISSN

    2632-0134

    e-ISSN

    2632-0142

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    • Description
    • Editorial Board
    • Instructions to Contributors
    Description

    This peer-reviewed journal proposes to explore the introduction of psychoanalysis, psychoanalytic therapy, and the wider application of psychoanalytic ideas into China. It aims to have articles authored by Chinese and Western contributors, to explore ideas that apply to the Chinese clinical population, cultural issues relevant to the practice of analysis and psychotherapy, and to the cultural interface between Western ideas underpinning psychoanalysis, and the richness of Chinese intellectual and philosophical ideas that analysis must encounter in the process of its introduction.
    Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy in China features theoretical and clinical contributions, philosophical and cultural explorations, applications such as the analytic study of art, cinema and theatre, social aspects of analytic thought, and wider cultural and social issues that set the context for clinical practice.

    Editorial Board

    Editorial Board

    EDITORIAL BOARD
    David E. Scharff, Editor-in-chief

    ASSOCIATE EDITORIAL BOARD
    Alf Gerlach
    Siri Erika Gullestad
    Li Mengchao
    Lin Tao

    Tomas Plänkers
    José Saporta
    , Book Review Editor
    Shi Qijia
    Sverre Varvin
    Wang Qian
    Richard Wu
    , Cover Editor
    Yang Yunping
    Zhang Peichao

    INTERNATIONAL EDITORIAL BOARD – CHINESE MEMBERS
    Chen Jue,
    Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine
    Fang Xin, Peking University
    Gao Jun, Fudan University
    Huang Hsuan-Ying, Australian National University
    Jia Xiao-Ming, Beijing Institute of Technology
    Li Mengchao, Shanghai Body and Mind Clinic
    Li Ming, Beijing Forestry University
    Liu Chia-Chang, Taiwan Centre for the Development of Psychoanalysis
    Liu Yiling, University of Kassel
    Qiu Jianyin, Shanghai Mental Health Center
    Teng Hui-Wen, Mindencounter Clinic, Taipei
    Tong Jun, Huazhong University of Science and Technology
    Wang Hao-Wei, Taiwan Institute of Psychotherapy
    Xu Yong, Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine
    Yang Fengchi, Beijing Capital Medical University
    Zhao Xudong, Tongji University
    Zhong Jie, Peking University

    INTERNATIONAL EDITORIAL BOARD – WESTERN MEMBERS
    Salman Akhtar
    , United States
    David Bell, United Kingdom
    Christopher Bollas, United States
    Patrizio Campanile, Italy
    Irmgard Dettbarn, Germany
    Matthias Elzer, Germany
    Lana P. Fishkin, United States
    Ralph E. Fishkin, United States
    Antje Haag, Germany
    Maria Teresa Hooke, Australia
    Horst Kächele, Germany
    Peter Loewenberg, United States
    Susan Lunn, Denmark
    Maya Nadig, Germany
    Clara Rosa Nemas de Urman, Argentina
    Bent Rosenbaum, Denmark
    Jill Savege Scharff, United States
    Hermann Schultz, Germany
    Caroline Sehon, United States
    Elise Snyder, United States
    Michael Stadter, United States
    Frances Thomson-Salo, Australia
    Janine Wanlass, United States
    Anders Zachrisson, Norway

    Instructions to Contributors

    Instructions to Contributors

    Articles for consideration should be addressed to the Editor and sent to David E. Scharff – davidscharff@theipi.org

    Procedure for submissions

    Articles should be typewritten, using double spacing, in Microsoft Word format.

    Submissions of full papers, including abstract and references, should be a maximum of 6,000 words in length. They should comprise two files, to assist in the editorial review process:
    – The first should include the paper, together with its title, a list of keywords, a list of references, and an abstract.
    – The second should include a cover page for the paper with its title, the author’s name and contact details (including postal and email addresses), and a brief biographical summary of up to 150 words.

    Language: Contributions should be written in English. Authors may choose to use British English or American English in first drafts, but please note the final material needs to be supplied in British English.

    House style: Please view the checklist for Phoenix journal articles here to ensure your submission follows house style.

    Abstracts: All papers must be accompanied by an abstract. This should be a maximum of 200 words.

    References: Please see detailed instructions here.

    Artwork: The inclusion of figures and images in contributions must be approved by the editors. If the editors agree, then the following applies. Unless otherwise agreed in advance, all artwork must be submitted in black and white.
    FORMAT: The preferred format is high-resolution PDFs, TIFF or JPEGs (please note that any JPEGs downloaded from the internet will only be 72dpi and too low resolution).
    RESOLUTION: black and white artwork (bitmap): 600 dpi. Photographs or any shaded matter (greyscale): 300 dpi. Fine tints in the artwork are not allowed as they do not reproduce well once printed.
    IMPORTANT: Graphics embedded in the Word file will not be of sufficient resolution for print-quality; they are useful as a guideline for positioning and identification purposes only. Therefore, please ensure that all graphics are supplied separately in PDF, TIFF or JPEG format, as specified above, in addition to being embedded in the Word document.

    Permissions: For information regarding the reproduction of others’ work, click here.

    Author’s declaration: Authors are asked to complete and send with their manuscript an “author’s declaration” confirming confidentiality, originality, and copyright. A copy of this declaration can be found here.

    Confidentiality and consent: Contributors are expected to use all possible means of assuring the confidentiality of those about whom they write, such as disguising significant aspects of the case material. Alternatively, authors should acquire their subjects’ consent. In general terms, contributors are required to follow the procedure adopted in their own countries which govern the conduct of their work with human or animal subjects. If requiring further advice, authors are invited to discuss these matters with a member of the journal’s International Advisory Board in their country.

    Originality: Papers submitted for publication are accepted on the understanding that they are the author’s / authors’ own work and that where the work of others is referred to or quoted, this is clearly attributed. Papers should not have been published elsewhere or be currently submitted to other publications.

    Peer review: All papers will be subject to peer review. In order to preserve anonymity in this process, the authors should supply the editors with two separate documents, as detailed above. When assessing the acceptability of the submission, peer reviewers are asked to consider the following questions:

    – Is the paper readable, accessible, and interesting?
    – Does it make appropriate use of psychoanalytic theory?
    – If applicable is there appropriate use of case material
    – Does it make a contribution to learning about forensic psychotherapy?

    Copy dates: Whilst the editors will welcome contributions at any time, authors should note that final copy dates for forthcoming issues will normally be on 1 April and 1 September of each year.

    Editorial procedure: Contributors will receive an acknowledgement of the receipt of their submissions. Following the process of peer review, the editors will decide either (i) to accept or reject or (ii) to accept, subject to modifications. The editors’ decision will be final.

    CHECKLIST

    Please be sure to include:

    1) A file containing:
    – Your paper
    – An abstract
    – List of keywords
    – List of references

    2) A file containing:
    – Cover page of paper with title
    – The author’s name and contact details
    – Biographical summary.

    3) Completed Author declaration.

    View the Final checklist for Phoenix journal articles here.

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