Perhaps the extreme development of the new view is 'what is known as "counter-transference self-disclosure": the analyst reveals...to the patient what he or she is feeling, so as to highlight the difference between the analyst's experience and that of the patient...In [one] opinion, this implies an entirely different view of what communication between patient and analyst is all about'<ref>Quinodoz, ''Reading Freud'' p. 72</ref> - the classical late-twentieth century view being that it is 'not a matter of confessing to the countertransference but of recognising it and integrating it into the interpretation'<ref>Etchegoyen, ''Fundamentals'' p. 299</ref>. | Perhaps the extreme development of the new view is 'what is known as "counter-transference self-disclosure": the analyst reveals...to the patient what he or she is feeling, so as to highlight the difference between the analyst's experience and that of the patient...In [one] opinion, this implies an entirely different view of what communication between patient and analyst is all about'<ref>Quinodoz, ''Reading Freud'' p. 72</ref> - the classical late-twentieth century view being that it is 'not a matter of confessing to the countertransference but of recognising it and integrating it into the interpretation'<ref>Etchegoyen, ''Fundamentals'' p. 299</ref>. |