Borderline: The Biography of a Personality Disorder

Borderline: The Biography of a Personality Disorder

by Alexander Kriss PhD
Borderline: The Biography of a Personality Disorder

Borderline: The Biography of a Personality Disorder

by Alexander Kriss PhD

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Overview

An intimate, compassionate, and expansive portrait of Borderline Personality Disorder that rejects the conventional wisdom that this condition is untreatable, told by a psychologist who specializes in BPD

Mental illness is heavily stigmatized within our society, and within this already marginalized group, folks with BPD are deemed especially untreatable and hopeless. When, as a graduate student, Alex Kriss first began working as a therapist in the field, his supervisors warned him that borderline patients were manipulative, difficult, and had a tendancy to drop out of treatment. Yet, years later, when Kriss was establishing his private practice and a borderline patient known as Ana came to his office, he felt compelled to try to help her, despite all of the warnings he’d heard.

Borderline is the story of his work with Ana—how his successes with her led him to open his doors to other BPD patients and advocate for them. Borderline is also the story of the disorder itself: Kriss traces accounts of the condition going back to antiquity, showing how this disease has been known by many names over the millennia, most of them gendered: possession, hysteria, witchcraft, moral insanity. All referred to a person—usually a woman—whose behavior and personality were seen as fractured, unstable, unpredictable, and uncontrollable. Kriss guides us through this history up through the emergence of psychotherapy, the development of the modern diagnosis, and attitudes toward treatment today.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807007822
Publisher: Beacon Press
Publication date: 04/30/2024
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 124,700
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Alexander Kriss, PhD, is an assistant clinical professor of psychology at Fordham University, director of the Fordham Community Mental Health Clinic, and author of The Gaming Mind. His private psychotherapy practice is based in Sleepy Hollow, NY.

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION
Collective Psychosis

1
Prehistory: The First Session

2
Splits, Hysteria, and the Invention of Psychotherapy: Fifth Century BCE–1885 CE

3
Psychic Death: Sessions, Weeks 2–19

4
Seduction and Fantasy: 1896–1923

5
Fears: Sessions, Months 6–10

6
Confusion of the Tongues: 1908–1933

7
Love: Sessions, Months 10–12

8
Identity Crises: 1939–1980

9
Self-Discovery: Sessions, Year 2

10
Diffusion: 1973–2011

11
Normality: Sessions, Year 3

12
Integration: 1980–2023

13
Borderline: Sessions, Year 6

Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
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