Part I. Psychology of Women: Clinical.McDougall, The Psychoanalytic Voyage of a Breast-Cancer Patient. Layton, Relational No More: Defensive Autonomy in Middle Class Women. Part II: Psychology of Women: Theoretical.Benjamin, Deconstructing Femininity: Understanding "Passivity" and the Daughter Position. Kristeva, Some Observations on Female Sexuality. Kieffer, Selfobjects, Oedipal Objects, and Mutual Recognition: A Self-Psychological Reappraisal of the Female "Oedipal Victor." Person, Something Borrowed: How Mutual Influences Among Gays, Lesbians, Bisexuals, and Straights Changed Women's Lives. Part III: Psychoanalysis and Women: Personal Narratives.Chodorow, Psychoanalysis and Women: A Personal Thirty-Five-Year Retrospect. Gilligan, Recovering Psyche: Reflections on Life-History and History. Solomon, Psychoanalysis and Feminism: A Personal Journey. Notman, Being a Woman Analyst from the 1960s into the Next Century: Some Reflections. Part IV: Women Who Shaped Psychoanalysis.Tolpin, In Search of Theory: Freud, Dora, and Women Analysts. Young-Bruehl, Anna Freud and Dorothy Burlingham at Hempstead: The Origins of Psychoanalytic Parent-Infant Observation. Schroeter, Muehlleitner, & May, Edith Jacobson: Forty Years in Germany (1897-1938). Schmidt, Therese Benedek: Shaping Psychoanalysis from Within. Hopkins, Red Shoes, Untapped Madness, and Winnicott on the Cross: An Interview with Marion Milner.