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Book Cover for: Creativity and Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy at Times of War, Exile, and Trauma, Rony Alfandary

Creativity and Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy at Times of War, Exile, and Trauma

Rony Alfandary

Creativity and Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy at Times of War, Exile, and Trauma draws upon decades of clinical experience to illuminate the unique challenges and profound insights that emerge when practicing psychoanalytic psychotherapy within a multifaceted social terrain.

With reference to clinical case material and theoretical insight, Alfandary offers readers unprecedented access to therapeutic work conducted in Israel amid ongoing cultural tensions, military conflicts, and intergenerational trauma. Drawing from Winnicott, Bion, Klein, and Freud, the author explores how exile, trauma, and war fracture both individual identity and the social fabric, and how these ruptures can also spark unexpected creativity and growth. The book also covers a range of themes, including immigration, cross-cultural work, military trauma and antisemitism, revealing how psychoanalytic practice adapts and responds to Israel's distinctive social pressures while offering universal insights into human resilience, trauma recovery, and the therapeutic relationship.

Creativity and Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy at Times of War, Exile, and Trauma will be of great interest to psychoanalytic psychotherapists, social workers and psychologists. It will also be relevant for academics and scholars of trauma studies, literary studies and interdisciplinary researchers.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Routledge
  • Publish Date: Mar 26th, 2026
  • Pages: 198
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 0.00in - 0.00in - 0.00in - 0.00lb
  • EAN: 9781041161783
  • Categories: Mental HealthPsychotherapy - PsychoanalysisCultural & Ethnic Studies - Middle Eastern Studies

About the Author

Rony Alfandary, Ph.D. is a clinical social worker and senior lecturer at the School of Social Work at the University of Haifa, Israel. He served as Director of the Post-Graduate Programme in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy at Bar-Ilan University until 2022. He is the author of twelve books, including prose and poetry.

Praise for this book

"Rony Alfandary, whose previous book powerfully traced the legacy of his own family's experiences during Nazi times, has written another open and compelling text, this time developing his ideas on the practice of psychoanalytic psychotherapy in Israel. With the aid of semi-fictionalised clinical 'cases' along with literary and social analysis, Alfandary explores how psychoanalytic practice can articulate the fraught context of one of the most trauma-saturated communities in the world. The book raises issues around trauma, inheritance, antisemitism and war and will be of value to all who are interested in the practice and politics of psychoanalysis." - Stephen Frosh, Emeritus Professor, Birkbeck, University of London

"Alfandary's book, drawing on decades of experience in the shadow of war, offers an original and illuminating interweaving of two healing threads, ethics and creativity, forming a generous, lucid, and deeply human guide to psychotherapy, trauma, and recovery. Through Alfandary's remarkable gift for storytelling, it stands as a compassionate testimony to the enduring human capacity for repair and to its hard-won restoration along the psychotherapeutic path in times of trauma and exile." - Prof. Roth Merav (PhD): A training psychoanalyst and cultural researcher, University of Haifa, International Sigourney award winner, 2024

"Rony Alfandary, a prominent figure in Israel's mental health field, combines in this powerful book his insights regarding attributes of Israeli society - the shadow of the Holocaust, experiences of migration, the traumatic impact of wars and terrorism, political struggles between democratic and authoritarian forces - with his thinking about the universal aspects of psychoanalytic psychotherapy and of clinical social work. His emphasis on the creative significance of psychotherapy is expressed in unique case studies and in explorations of the potential contribution of literature and music." - Emanuel Berman, Ph.D., Israel Psychoanalytic Society