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Along with the concept of transference, the three terms under consideration in this chapter have long been essential elements in the clinical language of psychoanalysis. Yet the understanding of these terms—process, resistance, and interpretation—has not remained static: each has followed a particular conceptual trajectory, and the clinical use of these terms has varied and changed over time. For this reason, instead of attempting a fixed definition of the terms, I take a historical and comparative approach, showing the different ways that the three concepts have evolved and are employed in contemporary psychoanalytic approaches.
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