Abstract
How exactly does a patient succeed in imposing a phantasy and its corresponding affect upon his analyst in order to deny it in himself is a most interesting problem… In the analytic situation, a peculiarity of communication[s] of this kind is that, at first sight, they do not seem as if they had been made by the patient at all. The analyst experiences the affect as being his own response to something. The effort involved is in differentiating the patient's contribution from his own. 1My title, 'Understanding Projective Identification,' is intentionally ambiguous. In this paper, I aim both to show how the psychoanalyst comes to understand what the patient is trying to communicate in projective...