CPS-QE New Catalogue 2019
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Psychoanalysis: the Impossible Profession
Psychoanalysis: The Impossible Profession PSYCHOANALYSIS: THE IMPOSSIBLE PROFESSION by Janet Malcollll A JASON ARONSON BOOK ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS, INC. Lanham • Boulder • New York • Toronto • Plymouth, UK A JASON ARONSON BOOK ROWMAN & LITILEFIELD PUBLISHERS, INC. Published in the United States of America by Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. A wholly owned subsidiary of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc. 4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200, Lanham, Maryland 20706 www.rowmanlittlefield.com Estover Road Plymouth PL6 7PY United Kingdom THE MASTER WORK SERIES CopyriJht o 1980, 1981 by Janet Malcolm Published by arranaement with Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. Most of this book was fust published in The New Yorker. All riahts reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from Jason Aronson Inc. except in the case of brief quotations in reviews for inclusion in a magazine, newspaper, or broadcast. ISBN: 1-56821-342-S ISBN 978-1-5682-1342-2 Library of CODJI'CSS Cataloa Card Number: 94-72518 Manufactured in the United States of America. Jason Aronson Inc. offers books and cassettes. For information and cataloa write to Jason Aronson Inc., 230 Livinpton Street, Northvale, New Jersey 07647. To my father It almost looks as if analysis were the third of those "im possible" professions in which one can be sure beforehand of achieving unsatisfying results. Tho other two, which have been known much longer, are education and government. -SIGMUND FREUD, "Analysis Terminable and Interminable" (1937) As psychoanalysts, we are only too aware that our profession is not only impossible but also extremely difllcult. -
Max Weber, Sigmund Freud, Charismatic Power, and Political Leadership
Max Weber, Sigmund Freud, Charismatic Power, and Political Leadership 2018 Franz Alexander Lecture Presented by Peter Loewenberg, PhD Thursday, May 17, 2018 8 - 10 PM 2 CE Credits *pre-registration preferred* Psychoanalysis is a social science as well as a humanistic, hermeneutic and a psychological science. Dr. Loewenberg compares the lives and thought of two great Central European shapers of modern culture, Sigmund Freud (1856- 1939), creator of psychoanalysis, and Max Weber (1864-1920), founder of modern interpretive comparative sociology. Weber was a contemporary of Freud who was the shaper of social science method. Dr. Loewenberg explores their lives and insights on leadership, political power and domination and applies their insights to empirical leadership functions in the current world. Learning Objectives As a result of attending this session, participants should be able to: Describe the theoretical contributions of Weber and Freud as they apply to leadership, political power, and domination Examine the nature of charismatic leadership in the political process and accepted empirical leadership functions in the current world Explain how Weber’s analysis of the Protestant ethic interface with Freudian psychodynamics Peter Loewenberg, PhD, is Professor Emeritus of History and Political Psychology at UCLA. He is a Training and Supervising Analyst and former Dean of the New Center for Psychoanalysis. He was elected North American Representative on the International Psychoanalytic Association (IPA) Board. He Chaired the IPA China Committee, 2007-2013. He is the author of many publications, including Decoding the Past: the Psychohistorical Approach (1996) and Fantasy and Reality in History (1995). He is Editor (with Nellie Thompson) of 100 Years of the IPA (1910-2010) (2011). -
Comprehensive Dictionary of Psychoanalysis
Akhtar prelims CORREX 7/16/09 5:30 PM Page i 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 COMPREHENSIVE DICTIONARY 9 10 OF PSYCHOANALYSIS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 20 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 30 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 40 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 50 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Akhtar prelims CORREX 7/16/09 5:30 PM Page ii 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 201 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 30 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 40 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 50 1 2 3 4 5 6 71 Akhtar prelims CORREX 7/16/09 5:30 PM Page iii 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 COMPREHENSIVE DICTIONARY 1 2 3 OF PSYCHOANALYSIS 4 5 6 7 8 9 Salman Akhtar M.D. 20 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 30 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 40 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 50 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Akhtar prelims CORREX 7/16/09 5:30 PM Page iv 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 First published in 2009 by 9 Karnac Books Ltd 10 118 Finchley Road, London NW3 5HT 1 2 3 4 5 Copyright © 2009 Salman Akhtar 6 7 8 9 The right of Salman Akhtar to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with §§ 77 201 and 78 of the Copyright Design and Patents Act 1988. -
No One Involved in the Planning Or Presentation of This Course (Activity) Has Any Relevant Financial Relationships with a Commercial Interest to Disclose
SELF PSYCHOLOGY 2016-2017. Gordon Berger No one involved in the planning or presentation of this course (activity) has any relevant financial relationships with a commercial interest to disclose. “It was a great honor to be invited to re-consider Kohut's contributions to interpretation, 25 years after his death. I was excited but daunted, for a great deal of what Kohut taught is now seamlessly woven into the fabric of my clinical sensibility. The empathic- introspective stance, the selfobject concept, the experience-near perspective, his understanding of how personality is organized, the pacing of interpretations—all of these concepts are implicitly integrated into the clinical work that I do. The ideas that follow about patient–analyst interaction owe an incalculable debt to Kohut. Yet, although I am proud to link my clinical sensibility to Kohut's, and believe his understanding of the profound influence of the surround on all psychological experience is still not sufficiently recognized and credited, my dyadic, intersubjective systems (Stolorow 1997) perspective goes beyond Kohut's theoretical conceptualizations. A wealth of self psychological post-Kohutian contributions have influenced me. .” --Shelley R. Doctors (2009), “Interpretation as a Relational Process,” IJPSP 4:449-465 Prior to our interest in contemporary psychoanalysis, many of us in the mental health field were trained with a general, often un-articulated, theoretical orientation towards classical psychoanalytic theory and one of its derivatives, ego psychology. However, in the second half of the twentieth century, there were two major disruptions to this theoretical hegemony in the United States, Self Psychology and the expanding influence of Relational theories. -
Volume 43, No. 2, 2009
the SPRING/SUMMER 2009 AMERICAN Volume 43, No. 2 PSYCHOANALYST Quarterly Magazine of The American Psychoanalytic Association The Long Haul: INSIDE TAP... Healing the Wounds of War AMICA . 8–9 Jonathan Shay Freud in America Jonathan Shay is internationally renowned for rather sweet story—I hope you’re moved in 1909 . 10 his groundbreaking work on the psychological that sense—of how these two Homeric books sequellae of war. His two books, Achilles in Viet- on war and returning from war came to be. I’ve Bear Market Blues. 12 nam and Odysseus in America, have created also discovered that there’s a “man bites dog” new and deep insights into the nature of these newsworthiness to my improbable career. APsaA Impacts injuries. Shay has compared his work with Vietnam I went to work for the VA in 1987 expect- veterans to the descriptions of battle trauma in ing to do something utterly, utterly different. I Stimulus Package. 14 the works of Homer, providing new perspectives was expecting to re-open the experimental Special Section on on issues related to the traumatic effects of neuropathology laboratory that I had had at combat that are as old as mankind itself. In Mass General Hospital, and the veterans kid- Outreach to High recognition of his work, Shay was honored with a napped me. They saw something in me that School Students . 20–23 MacArthur Fellowship. Shay was the keynote I for sure didn’t see in myself, and they redi- speaker at the Presidential Symposium of APsaA’s rected my life by at least 90 degrees. -
Unconscious Phantasy and Its Conceptualizations: an Attempt at Conceptual Integration
Int J Psychoanal (2015) 96:705–730 doi: 10.1111/1745-8315.12315 Unconscious phantasy and its conceptualizations: An attempt at conceptual integration Werner Bohleber, Juan Pablo Jimenez, Dominique Scarfone, Sverre Varvin and Samuel Zysman Werner Bohleber Kettenhofweg, 62 60325, Frankfurt am Main, Germany – [email protected] (Accepted for publication 14 October 2014) That there is a lack of consensus as to how to decide between competing, at times even contradictory theories, and about how to integrate divergent con- cepts and theories is well known. In view of this situation, the IPA Committee on Conceptual Integration (2009–2013) developed a method for comparing the different versions of any given concept, together with the underlying theo- ries and fundamental assumptions on which they are based. Only when situated in the same frame of reference do similarities and differences begin to appear in a methodically comprehensible and reproducible form. After having studied the concept of enactment followed by the publication of a paper in this Journal in 2013, we proceeded to analyze the concept of unconscious phantasy while at the same time continuing to improve our method. Unconscious phantasy counts among the central concepts in psychoanalysis. We identified a wide range of definitions along with their various theoretical backgrounds. Our primary concern in the present paper addresses the dimensional analysis of the semantic space occupied by the various conceptualizations. By way of deconstructing the concepts we endeavoured to establish the extent to which the integration of the different conceptualizations of unconscious phantasy might be achieved. Keywords: unconscious phantasy, conceptual research, conceptual integration Introduction Acknowledging the plurality of theories in psychoanalysis constituted a lib- erating advance within the analytic community, but it also concealed a potential inhibitive factor in attempts to integrate concepts. -
International Psychoanalytical Association
VOLUME 11 ISSUE 1 2002 INTERNATIONAL PSYCHOANALYSIS LETTERS Report on Nice Couches Homosexuality Rio 4 September 11 HOME PAGES Reports from officers Deputy Director General Semprún address RAB awardees German Psychoanalytical Society (DPG) Toronto congress 2003 Working Group on Terrorism FOCUS Terrorism and terrorists OPINION The aftermath of September 11 Training institutes WORLD WIDE PAGES China ‘At the end of the battle’ Dubrovnik summer school Regional news Forthcoming events IPSO news © Freud Museum, London Museum, © Freud Ruth F. Lax, New York, USA © Sebastian Zimmerman International Psychoanalysis The International The Newsletter of the IPA. ISSN: 1564-0361 Psychoanalytical Association Editor Translation Team President Honorary Vice-President Alex Holder Daniel Widlöcher Robert S. Wallerstein German: Past Editors Astrid Fuhrmeister, Joachim Roether, Past-President Ethel Person, Leopold Nosek Elisabeth Vorspohl, Eva Ristl, Katrin Otto F. Kernberg Representatives of the House Grünepütt, Michael Mertl, Alex Holder. of Delegates to Council Regional Editors Secretary Ken Heyward, Newell Fischer, Europe: Michel Vincent, Henning Paikin, English: Alain Gibeault Carmen Médici de Steiner Guiseppina Antinucci; Yves Le Juen, Philip Slotkin, Latin America: Renato Canovi, Susan Hale Rogers. Treasurer Associate Secretaries Eduardo Laverde, Germano Vollmer; Moisés Lemlij Ronald Brown, Ekkehard Gattig, North America: Abby Adams-Silvan, French: Rómulo Lander, Michael Sebek Irene Cairo-Chiandarini, Sharon Zalusky Liliane Flournoy, Marianne Robert, Michel Vice-Presidents Sanchez Cardenas, Francis Loisel, Michèle Jacqueline Amati Mehler, Ronald Language Editors Pollak-Cornillot, J.P. Verecken, Catherine Britton, Sverre Varvin, Alvaro Rey de Ex Officio German Newsletter: Alex Holder Roux. Castro, Cláudio Laks Eizirik, Mónica Alex Holder, English Newsletter: Janice Ahmed Siedmann de Armesto, Helen Meyers, Editor of the Newsletter; French Newsletter: Colette Scherer Spanish: Robert Pyles, Robert Tyson David M. -
A Philosophical Analysis of the Normative Assumptions in Freud's Psychoanalysis, Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory of Psychiatry and Frankl's Logotherapy
Loyola University Chicago Loyola eCommons Dissertations Theses and Dissertations 1998 Values in Psychotherapy: A Philosophical Analysis of the Normative Assumptions in Freud's Psychoanalysis, Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory of Psychiatry and Frankl's Logotherapy Sally R. Kowalkowski Loyola University Chicago Follow this and additional works at: https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_diss Part of the Philosophy Commons Recommended Citation Kowalkowski, Sally R., "Values in Psychotherapy: A Philosophical Analysis of the Normative Assumptions in Freud's Psychoanalysis, Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory of Psychiatry and Frankl's Logotherapy" (1998). Dissertations. 3730. https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_diss/3730 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses and Dissertations at Loyola eCommons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Loyola eCommons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. Copyright © 1998 Sally R. Kowalkowski LOYOLA UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO VALUES IN PSYCHOTHERAPY: A PHILOSOPHICAL ANALYSIS OF THE NORMATIVE ASSUMPTIONS IN FREUD'S PSYCHOANALYSIS, SULLIVAN'S INTERPERSONAL THEORY OF PSYCHIATRY AND FRANKL'S LOGOTHERAPY A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY BY SALLY R. KOWALKOWSKI CHICAGO, ILLINOIS JANUARY, 1998 Copyright by Sally R. Kowalkowski, 1998. All rights reserved. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS There are many people, without whom, this dissertation would not have been possible. I wish to thank Dr. Mark Waymack who was the inspiration for this project. It was his work, but most of all, his encouraging me to pursue my own ideas that allowed me to learn from this process. -
Mclean Library Weeding Sale
McLean Library Weeding Sale Sale will continue until all weeded books are sold. Updates to this list will be made as new books are weeded from the collection. Contact Librarian John Leonard at [email protected] or (312) 897-1419 to check on availability of items listed here. All books are $5.00 plus shipping and handling if applicable. All sales are final. The McLean Library accepts cash, check and credit card payments. Please make checks out to the Chicago Psychoanalytic Institute. Author , Editor or Publisher Title Karl Abraham Clinical Papers and Essays on Psychoanalysis Karl Abraham Selected Papers Lawrence Edwin Abt Projective Psychology: Clinical Approaches to the Total Personality Nathan Ackerman The Psychodymanics of Family Life Alfred Adler The Individual Psychology of Alfred Adler Alfred Adler The Practice and Theory of Individual Psychology August Aichhorn Wayward Youth Franz Alexander and Helen Ross Dynamic Psychiatry Franz Alexander The Medical Value of Psychoanalysis Franz Alexander and Thomas French Psychoanalytic Therapy C. Fred Alford Melanie Klein and Critical Social Theory C. Fred Alford Narcissism: Socrates, the Frankfurt School, and Psychoanalytic Theory Leon Altman The Dream in Psychoanalysis American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Your Child Robin Anderson Clinical Lectures on Klein and Bion Lou Andreas-Salome The Freud Journal of Lou Andreas-Salome E. James Anthony Depression and Human Existence E. James Anthony The Invulnerable Child E. James Anthony Parenthood: Its Psychology and Psychopathology -
Jacques-Alain Miller / How Psychoanalysis Cures According To
Newsletter of the Freudian Field, Volume 1, Issue 2, Fall 1987 Jacques-Alain Miller Jacques-Alain Miller How Psychoanalysis Cures According to Lacan The First Paris/Chicago Psychoanalytic Workshop, 1986 I My title is meant as a tribute to Heinz Kohut’s last work, How Psychoanalysis Cures.1 As to Lacan, I suppose there are both people acquainted with his thought and people who will hear of his existence for the very first time. I will try to keep contact with both parts of the audience. I shall begin with various misconceptions about Lacan. Perhaps Dr. Richard Chessick, who so kindly gave me his book yesterday evening, will not mind if I begin with his misconceptions of Lacan.2 I am sure that he knows a lot more than I do about Heinz Kohut, Otto Kernberg, and others, but perhaps I could refer to the two pages he devotes to Continental psychiatry and psychoanalysis, and help clarify some points on Lacan. The first misconception is that Dr. Chessick placed Lacan, as is usually done in this country, on a par with Roland Barthes, Claude Levi Strauss, Michel Foucault, and Jacques Derrida. That occurs on page 286 of this book, and I call this the “post-structuralist error.” The second misconception is a fine point on institutional matters. Dr. Chessick says that in the famous “pass” which Lacan instituted in his school, the students, one’s fellow students, could decide who was going to be a training analyst. The idea that Lacan allowed fellow students to decide who was going to be a training analyst is a misconception. -
Reupholstering the Couch: Women and the Refashioning of Psychoanalysis
From Philipson, Ilene, On the Shoulders of Women, 1993 CHAPTER 5 Reupholstering the Couch: Women and the Refashioning of Psychoanalysis The great question ... which I have not yet been able to answer, despite my 30 years of research into the feminine soul, is, "What does a woman want?" —Sigmund Freud If Freud were alive today, he most likely would be surprised to learn that what increasing numbers of women want is to become psy- chologists, psychiatrists and psychoanalysts. —Kathleen Hendrix (1992) Psychoanalysis always has been central to all of psychotherapeutic practice, the paradigm of thought from which all others have emerged, do battle, and measure their success. Due to the early influence of Sigmund Freud on the "new psychiatry," the child guidance movement, and, of course, the practice of psycho- analysis, and because the vast majority of alternative treatment modalities—from Fritz Perls's Gestalt therapy to Salvador Minuchin's family systems approach— were founded by psychoanalysts, psychotherapy in this country has always borne the imprint of Freud's basic developmental theories that privilege the phallus, the Oedipus complex, and the role of the father. In the past 10 to 15 years this imprinting has begun to . be reexamined and re- thought. While such theoretical scrutiny and willingness to challenge orthodoxy certainly is not new to the field, up until now it has been the intellectual property of the dissenters and outlaws within psychoanalysis in the United States. From Carl Jung and Sandor Ferenczi to Franz Alexander and Harry Stack Sullivan, men who challenged Freud and his fundamental principles were relegated to the pe- riphery of the discourse and profession in this country. -
Heinz Kohut, the Making of a Psychoanalyst
Heinz Kohut, The Making of a Psychoanalyst Douglas Kirsner Charles B. Strozier Heinz Kohut, The Making of a Psychoanalyst Farrar, Straus & Giroux, New York, 2001, 495pp., $A 75, Hardcover. Douglas Kirsner Faculty of Arts, Deakin University, 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood Victoria 3125 My yellowed copy of the news item in The New York Times of October 11, 1981 reads: ‘Heinz Kohut, a leading psychoanalyst who developed a new theory of the self in opposition to the ideas of Sigmund Freud, died Thursday of congestive heart failure at Billings Hospital in Chicago. He was 68 years old’. Kohut was certainly a seminal thinker in psychoanalysis and the founder of a major orientation or movement, especially in the US, that has developed world wide, including Germany and Australia. Although his ideas parallel British object relations theorists such as Winnicott, a number of the concepts of his ‘psychology of the self are separate developments (e.g., selfobject, his emphasis on empathy, narcissism and forms of transference). Kohut’s work has had a pervasive influence in the mental health field in general. A 1984 study asking leading American psychiatrists for what they regarded as the most important developments in the field in the preceding decade found thirteen books and only one journal article listed sufficiently often to be seen as the most important publications. Kohut (1971, 1977) was the only author mentioned twice (Strauss et al, 1984). According to a lead article in the American Journal of Psychiatry, Kohut’s work precipitated ‘a firestorm of controversy, challenging fundamental precepts about both the etiology and the treatment of psychopathology’ (Baker and Baker, 1987, p.