An Evening with Sylvia Brody, Ph.D. at the New York Psychoanalytic Institute

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THE FRIENDS OF THE A. A. BRILL LIBRARY
of The New York Psychoanalytic Society and Institute
 

invite you to a
Special Event
 
Friday, April 25, 2008 at 8:15 P.M.
 
The Auditorium of The New York Psychoanalytic Institute
247 East 82nd Street, New York, NY 10028
 
An Evening with Sylvia Brody, Ph.D.
 
Sylvia Brody, Ph.D., a most distinguished psychoanalyst and developmental researcher, came to prominence with her books documenting her observational, clinical, and theoretical studies on maternal behavior and child development. Among her contributions were Patterns of Mothering (1950), Anxiety and Ego Formation in Infancy (1970), Mothers, Fathers, and Children: Explorations in the Formation of Character in the First Seven Years (1978) and the follow-up study of the sample at eighteen years, Evolution of Character (1992). This body of work served to vividly demonstrate the significance of the child’s earliest experiences on emerging character structure and ego and superego functioning. In 2002, Dr. Brody published The Development of Anorexia Nervosa; a second edition came out in 2007.
 

Continue reading An Evening with Sylvia Brody, Ph.D. at the New York Psychoanalytic Institute

Sex Sells: Unpublished Letter to the Sun by Leon Hoffman

Unpublished Letter to the Sun by Leon Hoffman

Sex Sells

Why are we so the fascinated with the sexual lives of public figures
(“Albany starts to wonder at Patterson,” March 21-23, 2008)? We as a public
are both fascinated and outraged as we read story after story of sexual
misdemeanors.

Certainly many men in power and women too become involved in sexual
liaisons which too often lead them into severe difficulties. And, of
course, these sexual liaisons may lead to political corruption. However, as
Sigmund Freud noted over a century ago, a variety of sexual and aggressive
fantasies persist in everyone’s unconscious and conscious life.
Fortunately, most of us are able to limit our actions in order to live
cooperatively with our fellow humans.
Continue reading Sex Sells: Unpublished Letter to the Sun by Leon Hoffman

Catherine Stuart Memorial Lecture By Jack Drescher

The William Alanson White Institute LGBT Study Group
presents the first annual
Catherine Stuart Memorial Lecture

Friday, May 9th at 8pm
20 West 74th Street
New York City

Catherine Stuart Ph.D., Fellow, Supervising and Training Analyst, Co-Director Diversity Committee, William Alanson White Institute, was prematurely lost to her family, friends and colleagues on April 5, 2007. This lecture, presented by Dr. Jack Drescher, is the first in a series devoted to diversity and honors her memory.

Jack Drescher, MD
Homosexuality and Psychoanalysis
From the Preoedipal to the Postmodern

Dr. Drescher will review the history of psychoanalytic theories of, and attitudes toward, homosexuality. Psychoanalytic theories purporting to explain homosexuality’s “etiology” can be divided into three broad categories:  theories of immaturity, theories of pathology and theories of normal variation. Freud’s early theory of “homosexual immaturity” was replaced by later Neo-Freudian theories that pathologized homosexuality.  Then, in 1973, the American Psychiatric Association removed homosexuality from the DSM.  Dr. Drescher will illustrate the implicit values that psychoanalytic theorists historically used to construct their theories of “etiology.” He will also argue that the history of psychoanalytic attitudes toward homosexuality illustrates how psychoanalytic theories cannot be divorced from the political, cultural, and personal contexts in which they are formulated, and that analysts can take positions that either facilitate or obstruct tolerance and acceptance.

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Cultural History and Psychoanalysis by Peter Loewenberg

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Wilhelm Dilthey       R.G. Collingwood                    Marc Bloch

Click Here to Read: Cultural History and Psychoanalysis by Peter Loewenberg . Reprinted From “Cultural History and Psychoanalysis,”  Psychoanalysis and History, Vol. 9, No. 1 (2007), pp. 17-37. Reprinted with the author’s permission.  

 Here is the conclusion of Dr. Loewenberg’s article:

Conclusion
   There is a congruence of hermeneutic method between cultural history and psychoanalysis which includes a recognition of the subjectivity and self-reflexivity of interpretation; a quest for the latent meanings of manifest artifacts, symbols, and conduct; a recognition of the centrality of emotions in the structuring of motivation and action; the present condition, presenting complaint, pain, or symptom as a key to the past, if only one knows how to read or decode the message; an empathic method of understanding that includes the ability to engage with the cultural, social, and historical assumptions and background of the analysand or the subject; an attention to mini-narratives and the small telling detail that unfolds a larger level of meaning and interpretation.
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Outcome Research in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy

THE NEW YORK PSYCHOANALYTIC SOCIETY & INSTITUTE:
WORKS IN PROGRESS
247 East Eighty-Second Street, between 2nd & 3rd

Wednesday, April 16, 2008, 8:30 p.m.

Outcome Research in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy

Barbara Milrod, M.D. will discuss her successful clinical trials of psychodynamic psychotherapy for Panic Disorder. What disorder should be studied next?  How can psychoanalysts become more research literate?  How can we grow outcome researchers in psychoanalysis?

For information about our training programs please visit us at: www.psychoanalysis.org

Psychological Assessment for Non-Psychologists

THE NEW YORK PSYCHOANALYTIC SOCIETY & INSTITUTE: Extension Division
247 East Eighty-Second Street, between 2nd & 3rd

PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT FOR NON-PSYCHOLOGISTS
William Braun, Psy.D.

Tuesdays, April 15 – May 20, 2008
7:00 – 8:30 pm (6 sessions)

When to test
Different types of tests
What questions does testing answer
How does testing help with assessment and treatment
Perfect for non-psychologist therapists, parents, and teachers

To register call 212-879-6900
For information about our training programs please visit us at:
www.psychoanalysis.org