To the Editor,
Your article on psychiatry and the rich (July 7th, 2008: Age of Riches/ Therapists to the Elite) is deeply offensive to every person, rich and poor alike. It demeans the daring of poor people who seek help and rich people who seek help. It even demeans the daring of psychoanalysis as it reaches out to help human minds, rich and poor, to recover the self esteem neurosis ran off with. In my experience as a psychoanalyst the human mind transcends poverty and wealth. The conflicts of the poor are the conflicts of the rich, depth psychology , which began transplacental without a cent to its name on its complex journey toward the grave, being what it is. Any psychiatrist who does not know this basic existential truth should hang up his shingle! One expects more from journalism than this caricature of the human mind and all its complexities. This article is a perverse literary achievement that manages to demean doctors and patients, wealthy citizens and poor citizens in one fell satirical swoop. Shame on you New York Times!
Sincerely,
Eugene J. Mahon MD
Author: Tamar Schwartz
Splits in Psychoanalytic Communities (and in Tampa Bay) By Arnold Z. Schneider
Poetry Monday: Jeff Friedman
Poetry Monday: Jeff Friedman
Jeff Friedman
POETRY MONDAY
July 7, 2008
If you don’t already know the poetry of Jeff Friedman, you will find his work a delightful discovery. He is the author of four collections of poems, the most recent of which, Black Threads, was published by Carnegie Mellon University Press in 2007. His poems and translations have appeared in many literary journals and magazines, including American Poetry Review, Ontario Review and The New Republic. A contributing editor to Natural Bridge, he is a core faculty member in the M..F.A program in Poetry Writing at New England College. Continue reading Poetry Monday: Jeff Friedman
My Psychoanalytic Journey By Sheldon Bach
Book Review of Illuminations by Eva Hoffman and Notes by Julie Jaffee Nagel
Click Here to Read: “The First Impulse Was to Write about Music,” a review of the novel Illuminations by Eva Hoffman, reviewed by Michael J. Riesz, in The Independent Book Section on Friday, June 17th, 2008.
From the Music Editor, Julie Jafee Nagel: Career choice begins in early childhood for the musician, who, unlike other highly trained professionals (e.g., doctors, lawyers) can decide on an occupation at an older age. This fact has profound implications for mental and social development as the people who wind up at music schools and conservatories start lessons typically in childhood, spend numerous hours alone practicing, and are influenced profoundly during their growing years by parent and teacher attitudes and relationships. One’s ego develops alongside with one’s talent and object relationships. By adolescence and young adult years, there is a tremendous ego investment in oneself as a musician, not to mention the dollars spent on lessons and instruments. Further, the early age at which a young person finds he or she can not only find pleasure in competence at an instrument but also speak nonverbally through a musical instrument has profound implications for psycho-social development. The success or derailment of an eventual career for one with talent and for one for whom music has become an integral part of the self has profound intrapsychic, interpersonal, and social implications . Continue reading Book Review of Illuminations by Eva Hoffman and Notes by Julie Jaffee Nagel
Save the Date! The Future Of Psychoanalytic Education: Innovation Preservation: November 16th, 2008
Save the Date! The Future Of Psychoanalytic Education: Innovation Preservation: November 16th, 2008
Farkas Auditorium, NYU Medical School
(530-550 First Avenue, New York, NY)
November 16th, 2008: 9 AM – 5 PM Continue reading Save the Date! The Future Of Psychoanalytic Education: Innovation Preservation: November 16th, 2008
Save the Date! Symposium 2009: Greed, Sex, Money, Power and Politics February 21st and 22nd, 2009
Elyn R. Saks’s The Center Cannot Hold Reviewed by Sheldon Goodman
A Standing Interdisciplinary Forum: Psychoanalysis, Belief and Religious Conflicts: Conference in Israel
Freud Center for Psychoanalytic Studies and Research
Israel Psychoanalytic Society
Mishkenot Sha’ananim
A STANDING INTERDISCPLINARY FORUM: PSYCHOANALYSIS, BELIEF AND RELIGIOUS CONFLICTS
THE FIRST CONFERENCE:
THIS UNBELIEVABLE NEED TO BELIEVE
Mishkenot Sha’ananim, 20-21, November 2008
A collaboration between Gaby Shefler, Sigmund Freud Center for psychoanalytic research and study, the Hebrew University (Jerusalem), Julia Kristeva, (France SPP) Marilia Aisenstein (Greece SPP), Arnold Richards (USA) Viviane Chetrit- Vatine ,Shlomit Cohen, Raanan Kulka, Yolanda Gampel (Israel Psychoanalytic Society), and Yael Nahari (Mishkenot Sha’ ananim –Jerusalem)
Continue reading A Standing Interdisciplinary Forum: Psychoanalysis, Belief and Religious Conflicts: Conference in Israel
Minding the Gap: Freudian and Relational / Interpersonal Psychoanalysts in Dialogue at NYPS&I
THE NEW YORK PSYCHOANALYTIC SOCIETY & INSTITUTE
247 East 82nd St., between 2nd & 3rd
Save the Date!
Sat., February 28th, 2009
Conference:
MINDING THE GAP: FREUDIAN AND RELATIONAL / INTERPERSONAL PSYCHOANALYSTS IN DIALOGUE
9:30-11:30 THEORETICAL PANEL
Moderator: Edgar Levenson
Panelists: Jessica Benjamin, Harold Blum, Darlene Ehrenberg, Ed Nersessian Continue reading Minding the Gap: Freudian and Relational / Interpersonal Psychoanalysts in Dialogue at NYPS&I