Stefano Bolognini is a psychiatrist and a training and supervising analyst of the Italian Psychoanalytic Society (SPI). He is former President of the SPI and past President of the International Psychoanalytical Association (IPA), after having been IPA board representative for two mandates and member and chair of several IPA committees. He is a former member of the European editorial board of the International Journal of Psychoanalysis and of the European Psychoanalytical Federation (EPF) theoretical working party. He is also honorary member of the New York Contemporary Freudian Society (CFS), the Los Angeles Institute and Society for Psychoanalytic Studies (LAISPS), and the Florence Psychoanalytic Center (CPF), and a member of the advisory board of the International Psychoanalytic University of Berlin (IPU). He was the founder of the IPA Inter-Regional Encyclopedic Dictionary of Psychoanalysis (IRED) and former chair. He has published over 280 psychoanalytic papers and eight books, including Vital Flows between the Self and Non-Self: The Interpsychic (Routledge, 2022), which won the 2023 Gradiva Award. Dr Bolognini lives and works in Bologna, Italy. Luca Nicoli is a full member of the Italian Psychoanalytic Society (SPI) and the International Psychoanalytical Association (IPA). He was formerly adjunct professor at the Faculty of Psychology, University of Parma, and is currently a lecturer at the Alma Mater Studiorum University of Bologna Specialisation School of Psychotherapy. He has been an editorial member of the Italian Journal of Psychoanalysis, and is currently a reviewer for the International Journal of Psychoanalysis. He has published in Italian and international scientific journals, as well as several psychoanalytic books. The popular book The New Analyst’s Guide to the Galaxy: Questions about Contemporary Psychoanalysis, co-written with Antonino Ferro (Karnac, 2017), has been translated into five languages.
‘Freud and the Changing World: Contemporary Psychoanalysis and Its Troubles is a much-needed overview of the psychoanalytic enterprise as we know it today. Stefano Bolognini and Luca Nicoli have written a brilliant synopsis of where we stand today and where we need to go if we wish to advance our field. I highly recommend this book for all psychoanalysts and those who care about our profession.' -- Glen O. Gabbard, MD, training and supervising analyst, Center for Psychoanalytic Studies, Houston, Texas ‘In this slim volume we meet Stefano Bolognini as the ego ideal for contemporary psychoanalysts. He is wise in a humane and psychoanalytic sense and integrates what is meaningful from our psychoanalytic forefathers with recent perspectives. His understanding of psychoanalytic concepts is exemplary, while his elaborations of certain ideas help the clinician understand them with greater depth. He uses his wide-ranging knowledge (from Cicero to Sylvester the cat) as bridges to elaborate psychoanalytic ideas. It is a pleasure and enlightening to spend several hours with this sagacious analyst. Luca Nicoli serves as an inspiring interlocuter.’ -- Fred Busch, training and supervising analyst, Boston Psychoanalytic Institute; author of many papers and eight books ‘This book, cast in the form of an intimate dialogue, stands as a delightful reminder to psychoanalysts of all levels of experience and to the general public, that far from being in crisis, or even dead, the psychoanalysis of the twenty-first century still has much to offer as both a therapy and as a powerful perspective from which to explore the human condition. As noted in the introduction, it is the “red thread of a reflection on contemporaneity [that] guides the development of all the chapters of the book: both in referring to the characteristics and critical issues that define the global context in which we live, and in pointing out clearly what it can mean to ‘do psychoanalysis’ today”.’ -- Howard B. Levine, editor-in-chief, The Routledge Wilfred R. Bion Studies Book Series ‘Stefano Bolognini and Luca Nicoli offer an insightful and beautifully written view of the cutting edge of psychoanalytic theory and practice. Bolognini is one of the foremost analytic thinkers writing today and a gifted teacher; Nicoli is a keenly observant questioner. In language free of technical terms and free of cliché, Bolognini describes his way of thinking about essential analytic concepts such as the unconscious, the analytic field, transference, countertransference, gender, and the self. In lively dialogue with Nicoli, he describes his way of giving these concepts life in the analytic experience and in the contemporary analytic dialogue. This book is essential reading both for those early in their development as analytic practitioners and experienced therapists and psychoanalysts.’ -- Thomas Ogden, author of Coming to Life in the Consulting Room and Reclaiming Unlived Life