Showing posts with label April 2016. Show all posts
Showing posts with label April 2016. Show all posts

The Origins of Psychoanalysis: Books from the Library of Ernest Jones

The exhibition is open from 10am to 5pm on 6-9 April 2016, at Sotheby’s, 1334 York Avenue, New York. 


Bernard Quaritch will be exhibiting highlights from their forthcoming catalogue The Origins of Psychoanalysis: Books from the Library of Ernest Jones at Sotheby’s New York between Wednesday 6 April and Saturday 9 April.

Ernest Jones – ‘the Huxley […] to Freud’s Darwin’ – is remembered as the man who introduced psychoanalysis to Britain; founded the London Psychoanalytical Society; and persuaded Britain to offer Sigmund Freud sanctuary from the Nazis and effected his escape from Austria.

A neurologist by training, Jones (1879-1958) was introduced to Freud in 1908 by Carl Gustav Jung. The two men began a correspondence about all matters of the mind that would last thirty years until Freud’s death and, while establishing a career in Toronto, Jones promoted Freud’s theories across North America and co-founded the American Psychoanalytic Association in 1911. Upon his return to London, in reaction to the rift between Freud and Jung, Jones formed ‘Freud’s bodyguards’ – the famous ‘Inner Circle’, which would protect psychoanalysis from destructive influences.

Throughout his life, Jones was a prolific and influential writer and editor: in 1913 he published Papers on Psychoanalysis, the first account of psychoanalytic theory and practice in English by a practising analyst; in 1920 he founded the International Journal of Psychoanalysis; and in 1921 he established the International Psychoanalytic Library. During the 1930s Jones would play a key role in helping analysts to escape from Fascist Europe and he founded the Ernest Jones Rehabilitation Fund in 1938 – the same year that he enabled Freud’s immigration to Britain through his personal friendship with the Home Secretary, Sir Samuel Hoare.

This collection comprises important volumes from Jones’s core library, including works given or inscribed to Jones by Sigmund Freud, Anna Freud, C.G. Jung, and others. It includes Freud’s first monograph Zur Auffassung der Aphasien (1891, one of 257 copies), which prefigured the Freudian slip, Freud and Breuer’s Studien über Hysterie (1895), the ‘starting-point of psychoanalysis’, and a rare first edition of Freud’s landmark Die Traumdeutung (1900, one of 600 copies). Jones’ annotations in these volumes mark the development of ideas through his dialogue with Freud, which inspired some important changes in Freud’s works.

This collection documenting the history of psychoanalysis is a rare survival, and the most important of its kind to be offered on the market in recent years.

Please contact Anke Timmermann or Mark James for further details.

More info here. 

Addiction: A psychoanalytic perspective - Online webinar, 24 April 2016


  • Guidelines that explain where we stand when treating addiction from a psychoanalytic viewpoint
  • Main differences between psychoanalysis and psycotherapy based treatments
  • Admission criteria in different treatment centers/institutions hospitals/private practice.
  • The analyst's maneuvers to “Rectify the Other” (Lacan)
  • Transference and “Implication of the Subject” (Lacan)
  • short clinical Vignettes to help explain the treatment of addiction from an analytic point of view
More info here. 

April 2016 / Psychoanalytic Events

Welcome to our monthly roundup of all the goings on in the psychoanalytic field ― courses, conferences, seminars, workshops, exhibitions and book launches!


For daily news and updates visit our Facebook page dedicated to Psychoanalytic Events.

Let us know about your upcoming event by emailing freud.quotes [at] gmail [dot] com so you may be included in future roundup. 


New York
1 April / Film Screening / New School University
Psychoanalysis in El Barrio

San Francisco
2 April / The Lacanian School of Psychoanalysis   
Variations on The Standard Treatment

New York
1 - 2 April / Conference / The Graduate Center, CUNY
THE (IN)SANE SOCIETY: Remembering Erich Fromm and the Frankfurt School

Leicestershire
1 - 2 April / UKATA National Conference
The National TA Conference 2016

Vienna
1 - 2 April / Film screening / Sigmund Freud Museum
Movie and Studyday: À Ciel Ouvert

Los Angeles
2 April / Lecture / New Center for Psychoanalysis
27th Annual Melanie Klein Lectureship

Chicago
2 April / The Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis
Bruno Bettelheim Reconsidered and The Orthogenic School Today

Toronto
2 April / Course / Toronto Psychoanalytic Society & Institute
Misogyny

London
2 April / Lacanian Forum of London
Radu Turcanu: Phobia as Turning Point in Clinical Practice

London
2 April / Workshop / WPF Therapy
Projective Identification in Practice

San Francisco
2 April / The Lacanian School of Psychoanalysis 
The Disappearance of Hysteria Today

Philadelphia
2 April / The Philadelphia Lacan Study Group & Seminar
A/cephalic discontents: Session I

Toronto
4 April / University of Toronto
Lacan, Boys Don't Cry, Melancholia

Philadelphia
4 April / The Philadelphia Lacan Study Group & Seminar
Jacques Lacan: Ordinary and Extraordinary Psychosis

California
5 April /  Psychoanalytic Institute of Northern California
The Body of the Analyst and the Analytic Setting

Oakland
6 April / The Freud Bar
Escape from Reality / Wrecked by Success

New York
6 - 9 April / Exhibition
The Origins of Psychoanalysis: Books from the Library of Ernest Jones

Atlanta
6 - 10 April / Atlanta, Georgia
Division of Psychoanalysis: 36th Annual Spring Meeting

Poland
6 - 11 April / PCCA, Kliczków Castle, Poland
A House Divided Against Itself? Identities and Cultures in Violent Conflict

California
8 April / Psychoanalytic Institute of Northern California
On Fire - Gender Race Prison and Forgiveness

Massachusetts
9 April / Lecture / PINE Psychoanalytic Center
Freud and the Spoken Word:  Speech as a Key to the Unconscious

London
10 April / Film Screening / The Freud Museum London
Sigmund's Shorts: Reich Alone

London
10 April (ends) / Exhibition / The Freud Museum London
Emma Talbot: Unravel These Knots

London
12 April - 19 July / The Institute of Psychoanalysis
The Political Mind Seminar Series 2016

London
12 April / The Holly Bush Pub
British Psychoanalytic Association presents The Freud Bar

Melbourne
14 April - 1 September / Course / Melbourne Institute for Psychoanalysis
From Theory to Practice

London
14 April - 30 June / The Freud Museum London
Psychoanalysis and Philosophy: 12 week evening course

Prague / Paris
15 April (Application) / Prague & Paris 
Summer Psychoanalysis Course 2016

Zurich
15 - 16 April / Lacan-Seminar
Psychoanalyse und Islam – eine gegenseitige Herausforderung

London
15 April - 29 May / Exhibition / The Freud Museum London
Tall Tales

Lisbon
15 - 16 April / The Portuguese Psychoanalytical Society
"Of Freedom and Fear": Portuguese Psychoanalytical Society XXVII Conference

London
15 - 16 April / Confer
Healing of the Mind/Body Interface

Chicago 
16 April / The Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis
Rational Fools: How Psychoanalysis Explains the Flaws of Economic Models

Toronto
16 April / Toronto Psychoanalytic Society & Institute
Negative Therapeutic Reaction and the Compulsion to Disappoint the Other

London
16 April / Performance / The Freud Museum London
The Foot Exerts a Pressure On The Surface of The Glass, Ruth Barker

London
16 April / The Freud Museum London
Makers and scribblers: explorers of desire, fear and everything in between

London
16 April / The Tavistock Centre
Bion, Supervision and the Psychoanalytical Attitude

London
16 April / Workshop / WPF Therapy
Unconscious processes in couples choice

London
16 April / Seminars / The British Psychotherapy Foundation
The Work of Winnicott & Bion and Their Clinical Relevance

Chicago
16 April / Society for Psychoanalytic Inquiry
“Several Skins”/ Spring Summit 2016

London
17 April - 10 July / The Institute of Contemporary Arts
Framed Lives Summer Series: Screenings and Discussions on Iconic Painters

London
18 April / Seminars / The British Psychotherapy Foundation
Infant Observation

London
18-19 April / Birkbeck, University of London
Slavoj Žižek Masterclass: Surplus-Value, Surplus-Enjoyment, Surplus-Knowledge

London
19 April / Emmanuel Centre, London, SW1P 3DW
Slavoj Žižek in conversation with Gary Younge

California
20 April / Psychoanalytic Institute of Northern California
Technology and Psychoanalysis

London
20 April / The Freud Museum London
Policing a complex, challenging and turbulent society: A Freudian Perspective?

London
20 April / Course / The British Psychotherapy Foundation
Clinical and Theoretical Seminars: Lectures and Clinical Discussion Groups

Toronto
21 April / Toronto Psychoanalytic Society & Institute
Working in a Multicultural Environment: Understanding its Complexity

Colorado
22 - 23 April / Colorado College in Colorado Springs
Psychoanalysis and Freedom: The First Annual LACK Conference

London
23 April / The Wellcome Collection
Assisted Reproduction: Emotional and Identity Implications for Parents and Children

London
23 April / Conference / Tavistock Centre for Couple Relationships
Being and Doing: From Theory to Technique

Toronto
24 April / Toronto Psychoanalytic Society & Institute
Talking About Shakespeare Through Film

Online webinar
24 April / Mind Body Passport
Addiction: A psychoanalytic perspective

Rio de Janeiro
25 – 28 April / Copacabana, Rio de Janeiro
10th Congress of the World Association of Psychoanalysis

London
26 April / Film Screening / The Freud Museum London
Controversial Discussions for the XXIst Century

Edinburgh
27 April / Lecture / The Guntrip Trust
Guntrip Trust Lecture in memory of Murray Leishman, Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist

London
27 April / Woburn Room
The Psychodynamics of Social Networking

London
28 April / The Institute of Psychoanalysis
Borderline Patients Seminar Series

London
29 April / Tavistock Centre
Working with dangerous minds and vulnerable bodies

Maryland
29 April - 1 May / Conference
Winnicott's Technique in the Consulting Room:An Italian Approach

Denver 
29 April - 1 May / Association for Child Psychoanalysis
Annual Meeting - Association for Child Psychoanalysis (ACP)

San Francisco
30 April / Conference / San Francisco Center for Psychoanalysis
Interpretation Today Conference

Vienna
16 Oct 2015 – 12 June 2016 / Special exhibition at the Sigmund Freud Museum
„So this is the strong Sex.“ Women in Psychoanalysis



Let us know about your upcoming event by emailing freud.quotes [at] gmail [dot] com so you may be included in future roundup.



“Several Skins”/ Spring Summit 2016 - Apr. 16, 2016, Chicago




“S e v e r a l S k i n s”

The Enhanced Interrogation of Eric Santner
A public interview with the author on his new book:
The Weight of All Flesh

Psycho-Feminisms
A discussion on Jacqueline Rose led by Katie Glanz

Critical Theses on The Politics of Mental Health
A Discussion of the current state of mental health policy with The Kedzie Center of Chicago

Research Into the Night
A Veiled Exhibition and Talk by Writer, Artist, and Bataille Scholar Jeremy Biles

Started in 2014, the Society for Psychoanalytic Inquiry’s biannual summits touch down somewhere on the continental U.S. every winter(ish) and summer(ish). These semi-public meetings are the foci of reflection on activities and engagements aiming to open new possibilities of attending to the unconscious in the present; they serve as opportunities to collaborate with with other groups, to present works in progress, hash out theoretical debates, and devise future plans.

“Several Skins” couples the unconscious with questions of the flesh, skin, surface and body. Through — an interview with Eric Santner — a consideration of the base matter and body of art according to Georges Bataille — a discussion of the body and sexual difference in the feminist writings of Jacqueline Rose, and — a critical examination of US mental-health policy and the management of the body-politick —
Program

9-9:30 — coffee & eats
9:30-11 — Critical Theses
11-11:15 — break
11:15 – 1:15— Enhanced Interrogation of Eric Santner
1:15-2:30 — lunch
2:30-4 — Psycho-Feminisms
4-4:14 — break
4:15-5:45 — Research into the Night

Contact Ben Koditschek at bkoditschek@gmail.com to registers or with questions —

More info here.

Framed Lives Summer Series - Painters, April 17th - July 10th, 2016 - London

Screenings and Discussions on Iconic Painters


Framed Lives is a long-term programme of film screenings and discussions. Each series features four biographical films/documentaries about famous individuals within a specific field. Screenings are followed by brief presentations by psychoanalysts, film scholars and other experts, leaving plenty of time for discussion from the floor.

April 17th, 2016 10:00 PM through July 10th, 2016 12:00 AM

Location: The Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA), The Mall, London SW1Y 5AH

More info here.

The Political Mind Seminar Series 2016 - London

April 12th, 2016 through July 19th, 2016


A series of seminars on psychoanalysis and politics.

Although he was never directly involved in politics himself, Sigmund Freud’s contribution to political thinking cannot be overstated. He was fascinated with the way that our internal conflicts as individuals have outward consequences in the world at large – and many of his ideas laid down the basis of what has become an enormous body of thought on how society works.

He questioned the origin and structure of society in “Totem and Taboo”. He discussed illusions and dogmas in “The Future of an Illusion” and “Civilization and itsDiscontents”. He was critical of some aspects of Bolshevism in the “New Introductory Lecture on Psychoanalysis”, and he described the foundation of a people in “Moses and Monotheism”.

In this series of talks with leading psychoanalysts, we invite you to explore these influential theories with us, and discover how they can illuminate our understanding of political and social conflict around the world.

It’s interesting to imagine what Freud would have made of the world today, a time of polarising politics, social shifts and radical movements.

In “Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego” he explored crowd psychology, arguing that becoming a member of a crowd serves to unlock the unconscious mind. This happens as the super-ego, or moral centre of consciousness, is displaced by the larger crowd and the charisma of leaders.

In the agency of the superego, our conscious moral centre, Freud attributed values, ideals, and imperatives associated with morality and society. He also analysed the effects of repressed sexuality, naming “civilised sexual morality” as the source of “the nervous illness of modern times.”

Freud argued that a combination of forces in our psyche – the sexual drive, the death drive, and the instinct for mastery – have been inescapable drivers of change throughout humanity’s development.

And they’re especially relevant to a discussion of contemporary issues such as racism, terrorism, totalitarian thinking, NHS, the market economy, gender and sexuality. Scroll down to see the range of subjects we’ll be addressing in our programme.

Many of Freud’s ideas intersect with political thinkers such as Machiavelli, Hobbes, Marx, and Weber. For example, the radical rejection of all forms of illusion, the will to lucidity based on a flexible rationality, the dismantling of connections within communities, the emphasis on the autonomy and responsibility of the individual subject.

Over time, many other psychoanalysts have continued to contribute to political and social theory. Donald Winnicott argues that the development of our character is based on our environment, particularly our early relationships in life. That society provides the factors that support or undermine these early relationships – and that pathological or criminal acts can be seen as external manifestations of our internal conflicts.

Melanie Klein reiterated Freud’s belief that the human is riven with conflict, and how aggression and libido play themselves out in the individual, family, society and world politics. She emphasised the need to recognise guilt and make reparation, and argued that to achieve this there must be a difficult integration of love and hate – a lifelong struggle that has its equivalents in social and political scenarios throughout the world.

These theories on the mind provide the basis for psychoanalysts to understand political and social conflict that cause such distress and anxiety in our world.

I hope that you’ll join us for what’s set to be a brilliant set of lectures, discussions and debates about the nature of violence, both in the mind and in wider society. To book your place, click here.

Chair and Seminar Organiser, David Morgan

When
April 12th, 2016 8:15 PM through July 19th, 2016 8:15 PM

Location
The Institute of Psychoanalysis
Byron House
112A Shirland Road
Maida Vale
London W9 2BT
United Kingdom

More info here.

"Of Freedom and Fear": Portuguese Psychoanalytical Society XXVII Conference,15 - 16 April 2016, Lisbon, Portugal

The Portuguese Psychoanalytical Society will hold its XXVII CONFERENCE on 15 and 16 April in Lisbon, with the unifying theme "Of Freedom and Fear".


This event will bring together portuguese psychoanalysts and different personalities from different fields of culture. We will also have the pleasure to receive for two plenary conferences: “Psychoanalysis as Freedom Path” and “Fear and Freedom in the the current Societies: psychoanalytic approaches” our colleagues Leopold Nosek - with CAPSA-IPA support - and Paul Denis.

We believe that the subject “Of Freedom and Fear” – and the polysemy contained by it – has a profound contemporary relevance, and that psychoanalysis can bring a deeper understanding of both individual and social mechanisms related to those dimensions of the Human. Our aim is to gather a wide range of participants, and to put different areas of thought in dialogue with psychoanalysis.

Further information for programme and registration.

When
4/15/2016 8:00 AM - 4/16/2016 10:00 PM

Where
Faculdade de Psicologia da Universidade de Lisboa
Lisbon, Portugal

From Theory to Practice - 14 April - 1 September 2016, Melbourne

The use of psychoanalytic thinking to understand and develop clinical skills and organisational interactions.


Date: April 14th - September 1st
Thursday Evenings 8 - 9:30pm
Location: Melbourne Institute for Psychoanalysis
400 Tooronga Road, Hawthorn East

The central objective of the course is to develop and explore psychoanalytic concepts and how to apply them in ones work practice. This will be achieved through reading psychoanalytic material, presentation of clinical work and interactive group discussions.

Please Note; A limited number of bursaries MAY be available for this course, provided by The Australian Psychoanalytic Foundation.

For further details please contact : Milena Mirabelli, Course Co-coordinator. milenamirabelli@bigpond.com

More info here.

Bion, Supervision and the Psychoanalytical Attitude – Chris Mawson at the BAPPS Spring Conference 16 April 2016, London


This workshop will centre on the need for supervisors to foster the use of a particular state of mind in the practitioner, one which is suited for the use of intuition of inner reality and its expression in transference and counter transference; Chris Mawson will discuss how the minimum conditions necessary for an analytic attitude involves a suppression of the attention to external realities, foregoing the usual need to impose narrative and cause-and-effect, reassurance, explanation and theory. In doing so he will emphasise the specificity of a psychoanalytic attitude, and will show how this is at the heart of Bion’s clinical work and how he approached teaching and the supervision of analysts and psychotherapists. He also will show how it embodies Freud’s fundamental recommendations of clinical practice.

10am-4pm on Saturday 16 April 2016 at The Tavistock Centre, 120 Belsize Lane, London NW3 5BA

Booking form from www.supervision.org.uk. Enquiries to admin@supervision.org.uk

Workshop: Unconscious processes in couples choice - 16 April 2016, London


This workshop provides a way in to examining how couples choose each other, and how psychodynamic psychotherapy can play a role in addressing intimate couple relationships through clinical practice
  • What is going on unconsciously when two people choose each other?
  • What do we mean clinically when we speak of a ‘couple fit’?
  • How is the intimate couple relationship understood in psychodynamic psychotherapy?
  • What meaning might these ideas have for those offering individual counselling or psychotherapy?

Among the objectives of this workshop are to:
  • introduce a psychodynamic model of unconscious processes in the choice of a partner in an intimate relationship
  • illustrate some examples of unconscious collusive pairings in “couple fit”with the use of film extracts
  • discuss some psychodynamic couple clinical material in the light of the above
  • use contributions from the participants’ clinical work to apply this thinking to work with individuals

This workshop is open to qualified and training psychotherapists and counsellors. The theoretical orientation of the workshop will be psychodynamic but practitioners of other modalities are welcome to attend.

Location:

WPF Therapy Limited, 23 Magdalen Street, London SE1 2EN

More info here.

Symposium: Assisted Reproduction: Emotional and Identity Implications for Parents and Children

23/04/2016, London




This one day symposium will bring together leading speakers from the academic, psychology and psychoanalytic/ psychodynamic traditions, to help practitioners explore their understanding and thinking about working with members of families created by assisted reproduction technologies, including IVF, gamete donation and surrogacy.

Topics
  • Professor Golombok will give a lecture on Longitudinal studies of psychological well being of parents and children born through donor conception and surrogacy.
  • Professor Raphael-Leff will discuss the Impact of imaginary scenarios in structuring family ties.
  • Katherine Fine will help practitioners explore their understanding and thinking about working with members of families created by assisted reproductive technologies.
  • Dr Brian Feldman will be drawing on infant observation and work with parents and children.
  • Professor Lesley Caldwell will summarise by drawing together themes and concerns arising during the course of the day.

Location

The Wellcome Collection
183 Euston Road
London NW1 2BE

More info here. 
 

TCCR Conference - Being and Doing: From Theory to Technique - 23 April 2016, London

The Tavistock centre for Couple Relationships (TCCR) and its forerunner the Tavistock Institute of Marital Studies (TIMS) have been important institutions in the world for the psychoanalytic study of couple relationships since 1948, engaged in the development of central couple psychoanalytic concepts and theory still used by therapists in the UK and worldwide today.


This conference showcases the further development of these concepts by TCCR’s leading couple psychoanalytic psychotherapists Mary Morgan, Andrew Balfour and Susanna Abse, examining the vital links between theory and practice in the consulting room.



Date: Saturday 23 April 2016

Time: 10:00am - 4:00pm (9:30 registration)

Speakers:

Mary Morgan, Consultant Couple Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist, Psychoanalyst and Fellow of the British Psychoanalytical Society, Head of MA in Couple Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, TCCR

Andrew Balfour, Consultant Clinical Psychologist, Individual & Couple Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist and Executive Director of TCCR;

Susanna Abse, Consultant Couple Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist and CEO of TCCR &;

Catriona Wrottesley (chair), Couple Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist and TCCR Clinical Lecturer (CPD and commissioned trainings)

More info here.

The Psychodynamics of Social Networking - 27 Apr 2016, London


Over the past decade, the very nature of the way we relate to each other has been utterly transformed by online social networking and the mobile technologies that enable unfettered access to it. Our very selves have been extended into the digital world in ways previously unimagined, offering us instantaneous relating to others over a variety of platforms like Facebook and Twitter among others. While in many ways this introduces a seemingly new paradigm of relating, these new tools still operate on the basis of the same psychological motivations that have always been present.

Drawing on findings from his book The Psychodynamics of Social Networking: connected-up instantaneous culture and the self, Aaron Balick will apply psychodynamic thinking to understanding today’s digital society from a digital-relational perspective. Broadly, this seminar and discussion will be an application of psychotherapeutic thinking to culture — a necessary angle on today’s digital world that is largely missing from social discourse.
 
Presenter: Aaron Balick PhD

Aaron Balick is a psychotherapist, cultural theorist, media consultant and author of The Psychodynamics of Social Networking: connected-up instantaneous culture and the self. For more than a decade, he has been taking psychological findings from the clinic and the University and transforming them into useful concepts that can be applied to individuals, organisations and culture. Aaron is also an active communicator and international speaker, a writer for publications including Wired, BBC Online and The Guardian. He is a regular voice on BBC Radio 1 and has consulted on a variety of projects that bring psychological and emotional insight to younger people through the media.

Date/Time - 27 Apr 16 | 6:30 pm - 8:30 pm |£15.00 - £30.00
Location Woburn Room, Senate House, Malet St, London WC1E 7HU

More info here.
 

Guntrip Trust Lecture in memory of Murray Leishman, Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist - 27 April, Edinburgh



MISOGYNY - 44th ATPPP Scientific Session, April 2, 2016, Toronto

Presenter: Leticia Glocer Fiorini
Discussant: Deborah P. Britzman

Saturday, April 2, 2016: 9:00 am – 12:00 pm


What is misogyny? At first sight it is discrimination and depreciation of women manifested explicitly or implicitly, in different ways, from the most obvious to the most covert and subtle. A thin red line connects situations of extreme violence (for instance rape in times of peace or war) to other forms of gender violence such as sex slave trade, feminicide, and extreme forms of violence against women such as “burnt women”. This line runs through discourse exerting psychological abuse and leads inevitably to feelings of disparagement and as a consequent loss of self-esteem in women affected.

We could say that in today’s societies and cultures, important changes in relation to the place of women co-exist with manifestations of misogyny which deserve to be examined. Misogynous humor is is a classic example of how misogyny is embedded in our culture, and we need to evaluate it as a powerful manifestation of the unconscious. The way we describe in psychoanalytic theory the “woman as an object” is another example. In this context, are clinicians immune to misogyny? This question leads us to revisit positions regarding sexual and gender differences and to determine whether the psychotherapy field and psychotherapists as such are excluded from misogynous positions or not.

More info here.

Negative Therapeutic Reaction and the Compulsion to Disappoint the Other, April 16, 2016 - Toronto

Saturday, April 16, 2016, 8:00 am – 4:00 pm
Hart House, University of Toronto


Negative Therapeutic Reaction and the Compulsion to Disappoint the Other
Presenter: Léon Wurmser
Discussant: Charles Hanly

Very often when we work with patients with severe neuroses we have to contend with what Freud (1923) called the “negative therapeutic reaction”: that every progress in the analytic or therapeutic work is paradoxically followed by a clinical deterioration. The entire therapy and their life as a whole seem to be strongly influenced or even pervaded by a sense of negativity, nothing good is allowed to stand. These patients struggle with guilt, shame, the subversive unholy trinity of envy, jealousy, and resentment, attachment to pain, turning trauma from passive to active, conflicts within the superego, fear of gratitude, and the defensive use of omnipotence of responsibility. The case presented demonstrates these complex dynamic factors and treatment challenges.

Childhood Traumatic Experience and Developmental Interference
Presenter: Harold P. Blum
Discussant: Margaret Ann Fitzpatrick Hanly

The young man began psychoanalysis complaining of generalized anxiety and depressed moods since his late adolescence. Although well functioning in many areas, he was dependent, needy, and gratified by the intimacy and frequency of the psychoanalytic situation. Interpretation of his intrusive fantasy life was synergistic with retrieval and reconstruction of pathogenic childhood traumatic experience. Born to adolescent parents, he progressively mastered ongoing developmental interference. A very rewarding analytic outcome was achieved without the ancillary use of pharmacological agents or supportive psychotherapy.

More info here.

Working in a Multicultural Environment: Understanding its Complexity, 21 April 2016, Toronto

Thursday, 7:30 pm – 10:00 pm: April 21, 28, May 5, 12, 2016


Course Coordinator: Kas Tuters
Course Leaders: Kas Tuters, Madhu Vallabhaneni

Doing therapy in a multicultural setting (such as Toronto), we are exposed to the interaction and impact of diverse cultures. This creates specific challenges. In order to be maximally effective in our work, we have to understand the many complex factors that come into play in regards to culture, ethnicity and race.

More info here.
 

Projective Identification in Practice, 2 April 2016, London


This workshop will study projective identification as it is experienced in therapeutic practice. Projective identification will be examined in the transference and countertransference; in its different forms whether attributative, evocative or acquisitive; its various motives, whether to communicate, evacuate, possess, control, deny separateness or overcome loss; and as it operates interpersonally, and intrapersonally between the ego and superego.

Therapeutic technique will be discussed in relation to working through to enable the retrieval of projective identifications. These different aspects of projective identification will be illustrated through the presentation of clinical material. Workshop participants will be welcome to contribute examples from their own practice for discussion.

Workshop Leader
Paul Terry is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist. He is currently working in private practice. Most recently he worked in a Specialist Mental Health Team for Older People in Hertfordshire Partnership NHS Foundation Trust. He has worked in child, adolescent, and adult mental health, and forensic settings. He was Lecturer in Counselling at Birkbeck College, University of London. Paul has a particular interest in projective identification. It is a central concept which threads its way through his published case studies because he finds it especially helpful in illuminating clinical practice. In 2008 he published a revised second edition of his book Counselling and Psychotherapy with Older People: A Psychodynamic Approach (London: Palgrave Macmillan)

For more information and to book

Date:
Saturday, 2 April, 2016 - 10:00 to 16:00

Venue:
WPF Therapy, 23 Magdalen Street, London SE1 2EN

A House Divided Against Itself? Identities and Cultures in Violent Conflict, 6 - 11 April 2016, Kliczków Castle, Poland


http://p-cca.org/assets/Uploads/pcca2016flyer.pdf

Europe and many parts of the world are experiencing tension, fear and unrest caused by the surfacing and eruption of new and old threats: financial uncertainty and crisis, religious and ethnic intolerance, waves of legal and illegal immigration, and minorities that claim autonomy and political recognition. This unrest has increasingly given rise to hatred, violence and attacks against those perceived as "others". We believe that such attacks stem largely from feeling that one's own identity and cultural safety are threatened.

This conference explores the sources for such feelings and what contributes to their violent expression in action. The approach is based on the application of Group Relations methodology, which aims to explore and understand social processes through the experience of conference participants, assisted by an experienced international staff. It is a continuation of PCCA's work with Germans and Israelis, as well as with Palestinians and Others.

Conference staff: Leslie Brissett, M. Fakhry Davids, Shmuel Erlich, Veronika Grueneisen, Olya Khaleelee, Nadine Riad Tchelebi, Allan Shafer, Yael Sharon, Iwona Sołtysińska, Dorothee C. von Tippelskirch-Eissing

Sponsoring organisations:
German Psychoanalytic Association
German Psychoanalytic Society
Israel Psychoanalytic Society
Polish Psychoanalytical Society
International Psychoanalytic Association
OFEK – The Israel Association for the Study of Group and Organizational Processes
The Tavistock Institute

Contact Geber+Reusch, Brigitte Reusch, Habichtsweg 11, D-60437 Frankfurt
Phone: +49 (0) 69 50 52 39
Email: geber-reusch@t-online.de

Date:
Wednesday, 6 April, 2016 - 15:00 to Monday, 11 April, 2016 - 13:00

Venue:
Kliczków Castle, Poland

More info here.
 

Lacan, Boys Don't Cry, Melancholia - 4 April 2016, Toronto

Force in Progress
Lacan, Boys Don't Cry, Melancholia


Leo Bersani is a literary theorist and Professor of French (emeritus) at the University of California-Berkeley whose work considers art, literature, film, and psychoanalysis. His books include The Culture of Redemption, Homos, Intimacies (co-authored with Adam Phillips), and "Is the Rectum a Grave" and Other Essays. His most recent book is Thoughts and Things (Chicago, 2015).

More info here.

Force in Progress: Lacan, Boys Don't Cry, Melancholia
Innis Town Hall, Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Time: Apr 4th, 6:30 pm End: Apr 4th, 8:00 pm
Interest Categories: Women/Gender, Sexual Diversity, Psychology, French, English, Drama, Theatre, Performance Studies, Critical Theory, Comparative Literature, Cinema, Arts, Culture and Media (UTSC), Art, Architecture, Landscape, Design
Lecture by Leo Bersani, UC-Berkeley
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Bartleby, the Scrivener: “I would prefer not to.
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