Part 1 of this paper draws on the film Back to the Future (1985) to highlight various aspects of adolescence, the oedipal situation, and transgenerational factors. The authors then discuss the Oedipus myth and its themes of adolescence, narcissism, identity, acting out, repetition, aggression, and the parent-child relationship, among others. Comments drawn from Winnicott's writing on oedipal issues are discussed as well. As an illustration of some of these issues, in Part 2, the authors present the clinical case of Osvaldo, age sixteen. Transference-countertransference issues in this treatment are explored in depth.
Keywords: Adolescence; D. W. Winnicott; analytic process; anxiety; development; ego formation; identification; oedipal complex. Oedipus myth; parent-child relationships; sexuality; transference-countertransference; transgenerational factors.
© 2014 The Psychoanalytic Quarterly, Inc.