Historic Debate (Part III, rebutals): Leo Rangell and Andre Green at 1975 IPA Meeting

Introduction by Leo Rangell: At the IPA Congress in London in 1975, a debate took place in the opening plenary session between Andre Green and me on “Changes in Psychoanalytic Theory and Practice”. I argued for a continuing, cumulative single theory, while Green felt hat new and sicker patients required significant changes in theory. About a quarter century later, Martin Bergmann referred to this debate as a landmark in the history of psychoanalysis, placing it in a series with earlier debates, on Ferenczi’s active technique, Wilhelm Reich’s character analysis, and the Controversial Discussions between the proponents of Melanie Klein and Anna Freud. “In the debate itself,” Bergmann writes, “Rangell and Anna Freud [who was the discussant ofthe two papers] carried the day,” but continues, “the era they represented had already passed.” Although winning “hands down” on content, the analytic center, “so eloquently defended by Rangell and Anna Freud, could not turn back the tide of change that André Green had represented.”

Looking back at this intercontinental discussion, it might well be that this conclusion initiated the general attitude of pluralism over unity that followed as this debate was followed by an explosion of psychoanalytic theory from a fairly uniform system to a cluster of competing theories. The original tapes of this historic exchange have been preserved and can here be listened to again. From a current perspective, it might be asked: “What might have been the course of theory had the one who won actually won.”

NOTE: In the recordings linked below, Andre Green’s presentation is interpreted in the voice of a female interpreter.

This portion of the debate took place immediately following the remarks by Anna Freud as posted last time, and in fact picks up on the heels of the lengthy applaiuse which followed her talk.

Click Below to Listen to: Introduction and Leo Rangell, Rebutal, Part 1

Click Below to Listen to: Leo Rangell, Rebutal, Part 2

Click Below to Listen to: Andre Green, Rebutal, Part 1

Click Below to Listen to: Andre Green, Rebutal, Part 2

The Mind in Conflict with Ian Buckingham at NYPSI

PLEASE JOIN NYPSI FOR A YEAR LONG CELEBRATION OF OUR CENTENARY: CELEBRATING A CENTURY OF ADVANCEMENT THROUGH SELF-KNOWLEDGE: THE NEW YORK PSYCHOANALYTIC SOCIETY & INSTITUTE: Extension Division
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THE MIND IN CONFLICT
Ian Buckingham, M.D.
Thursdays, 8:30 – 10 pm
March 17 – May 5, 2011 (8 Sessions)
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Lois Oppenheim, Ph.D. in Conversation with . . .Mark Morris at NYPSI

PLEASE JOIN NYPSI FOR A YEAR LONG CELEBRATION OF OUR CENTENARY
CELEBRATING A CENTURY OF ADVANCEMENT THROUGH SELF-KNOWLEDGE
THE NEW YORK PSYCHOANALYTIC SOCIETY & INSTITUTE:
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247 East 82nd St., between 2nd & 3rd, NY, NY, 10028

CONVERSATIONS SERIES

Friday
February 18, 2011
7:30 pm
Fee $25

Lois Oppenheim, Ph.D.
in Conversation with . . .Mark Morris
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Screening of Letter From An Unknown Woman at NYPSI

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AS IT CONTINUES ITS CENTENARY CELEBRATION WITH THE NYPSI CENTENARY CINEMA SERIES SCREENING OF:
Letter From An Unknown Woman

Max Ophüls’ 1948 adaptation
of the Stefan Zweig novella
followed by a discussion by
Tom McCarthy
acclaimed author of C

When: Friday, February 25, 2011, 7:00 PM
Where: The Auditorium of The New York Psychoanalytic Institute
Admission is free and open to the public
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Photography Friday: Sebastian Zimmermann

Dr. Charles Brenner, by Sebastian Zimmermann

Dr. Brenner served as President of the New York Psychoanalytic Society and was a cornerstone of the Society and Institute, remaining active there for more than 50 years.

“In 2005, I set out to photograph Charles Brenner.  Since he had already retired, I met him in his home. While I was photographing him, I noticed a beautiful chess game in the back of his living room. When I asked him about the game, Dr. Brenner said that he had not played in a while. He mentioned that Freud liked to play chess in the coffee houses of Vienna. He added that Freud once compared psychoanalysis to the game of chess where the players could only know with certainty the opening and end-game moves and that the middle was more unpredictable.
I spontaneously asked Dr. Brenner if I could photograph him in front of his chess board. He readily agreed. I took a whole series of images of him while he looked at me intently, much like a formidable grand master.
I later wondered why I was drawn to photograph Dr. Brenner in front of a chess board. I think to me, at that moment, the game of chess was a metaphor for the warring factions of a mind in conflict.
Dr. Brenner’s precise, logical and rule-bound style of psychoanalysis is mirrored in the royal game. And most would agree, Charles Brenner was one of the kings of psychoanalysis.”
Sebastian Zimmermann, Psychiatrist and photographer

New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute 1911-2011

Click Here to Read: The NYPSI Centenary posts on this website.

Click Here to Read:  NYPSI Centenary Schedule on their website.

The New York Psychoanalytic Society is the oldest psychoanalytic organization in the United States. It was founded in 1911 by Dr. Abraham A. Brill and a small group of like-minded colleagues, who were excited by and committed to the revolutionary discoveries of Sigmund Freud and his students. Training in psychoanalysis was rather informal until 1931 when the Society established the New York Psychoanalytic Institute. It was the first psychoanalytic training center in the United States, and it has had a long and distinguished history. It was here that major advances in psychoanalytic theory and practice were made. The Institute was the professional home of many of the best known analysts of their time. These included Kurt Eissler, Heinz Hartmann, Ernst Kris, Rudolph Loewenstein, Charles Brenner, Margaret Mahler, and many others. Today, an excellent faculty and membership carry on their commitment to scholarship and to the highest clinical standards. While remaining faithful to its traditions, the Institute has modernized its curriculum and greatly increased the number of programs it offers. Younger members are encouraged, as soon as they have graduated, to become active in educational and administrative capacities. After much deliberation, we have now adopted a new form of governance. The Society and Institute have been merged and we now have a single Board and President. A new office, that of the Dean, has been created. The Dean oversees all of our educational programs. The Education Committee will continue to supervise the analytic training program. Our aim is to make our governance both more inclusive and more efficient.

100th Anniversary Symposium: Memory and Unconscious at NYPSI

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CELEBRATING A CENTURY OF ADVANCEMENT THROUGH SELF-KNOWLEDGE

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SCIENTIFIC MEETING
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212-879-6900
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AS IT CELEBRATES THE FOUNDING OF ITS SOCIETY ON FEBRUARY 12, 1911
WITH THE 100TH ANNIVERSARY SYMPOSIUM:

MEMORY AND UNCONSCIOUS

Saturday, February 12, 2011
9:30 am – 4:45 pm
FREE
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