Echoes of Childhood reveals how the wisdom of child analysis revitalizes work with adults. It gathers an international group of distinguished psychoanalysts who demonstrate the relevance of developmental perspectives for clinical practice by illustrating the enduring influence of early life on personality, relationships, and therapeutic change.
Echoes of Childhood: The Foundational Role of Child Analysis in Adult Analytic Work explores how techniques developed in child psychoanalysis open new depth and flexibility in the treatment of adults. Far from being a specialized niche, child analytic work reveals the earliest layers of psychic life. It offers tools that sharpen listening, expand tolerance of intense affect, and illuminate the hidden child within every patient. Editor Caroline Sehon brings together leading figures Ana Maria Barroso, Mary T. Brady, Talia Hatzor, Theodore Jacobs, Jeanne Magagna, Rex McGehee, Jack Novick, Kerry Kelly Novick, Daniel W. Prezant, Justine Kalas Reeves, Jill Savege Scharff, David E. Scharff, and Virginia Ungar to add their groundbreaking and engaging contributions on this vital component for adult analysis to her own. Drawing on richly detailed child cases, each chapter is followed by expert commentary, creating a dialogue that bridges the worlds of child and adult analysis. The reader is guided through clinical encounters that highlight how attention to play, gesture, nonverbal communication, and the management of overwhelming feelings – skills honed in child work – translate directly into more effective adult treatment.













