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 Diving Bell and the Butterfly: An Ego Psychology Perspective on Resilience by Janice S. Lieberman

Click Here to Read:  The Diving Bell and the Butterfly: An Ego Psychology Perspective on Resilience by Janice S. Lieberman, Ph.D.

This article previously appeared as: by Janice S. Lieberman
 (Spring 2009) The Diving Bell and theButterfly: An Ego Psychology Perspective on Resilience.  PANY Bulletin, Vol. 47:1 and appears here with all requisite rights and permissions.

William I. Grossman’s Papers

Click Here to Read:  Table of Contents of William Grossman’s papers on this website.

Click Here to Read: Introduction: William I. Grossman, M.D. By Arnold Wilson, Ph.D.

Click Here to Read:  Three Commentaries on Gender in Freud’s Thought: A Prologue to the Psychoanalytic Theory of Sexuality William I. Grossman, M.D & Donald M. Kaplan, Ph.D.

Click Here to Read: Comments on the Concept of the “Analyzing Instrument” by William Grossman.

Click Here Read:  Anthropomorphism—Motive, Meaning, and Causality in Psychoanalytic Theory by William I. Grossman, M.D. and Bennett Simon, M.D.

Click Here to Read:  Grossman, W.I. (2000).  Review of Freud and his Aphasia Book  By Valerie Greenberg.  International Journal Psycho-Analysis 81: 603-606. Ithaca and London: Cornell Univ. Press. 1997. 207 pp.

Click Here To Read:  A Phylogenetic Fantasy: Overview of the Transference Neuroses By Sigmund Freud, edited by Ilse Grubrich-Simitis; translated by Axel Hoffer and Peter T. Hoffer. Cambridge, Mass.:  Harvard Univ. Press, 1987, xvii + 113 pp., $17.50.

 Click Here to Read: Before the Pleasure Principle: Translation and its Vicissitudes by William I. Grossman, M.D. Originally appeared in 1986 J. Amer. Psychoanal. Assn., 34:488-489 – used by permission. 

Click Here to Read:  Reconsidering Childhood Genital Sensations and the Development of Femininity by William I. Grossman, M.D.
Third Annual Freud Lecture, N.J. Psychoanalytic Society, 6 May 99; Hall Memorial Lecture, Emory Univ. School of Medicine, 3 April 98.

Click Here to Read:  Discussions of “Contemporary Perspectives on Self:  oward an Integration” by William I. Grossman, M.D. Originally appeared in (1991)  Psychoanal. Dial., 1:149-172.

Click Here to Read: Freud and Horney: A Study of Psychoanalytic Models via the Analysis of a Controversy[1] by William I. Grossman.

Click Here to Read:  Freud Ou Reich? Psychoanalyse Et Illusion By Bèla Grunberger and Janine Chasseguet-Smirgel.  Poitiers, France:  Claude Tchou, 1976, 245 pp., 49f.  Review by William I. Grossman, M.D.

Click Here to Read:  Knightmare in Armor: Reflections on Wilhelm Reich’s Contributions to Psychoanalysis by William I. Grossman  Reprinted from Psychiatry Vol. 39, No. 4, November 1976.

Click Here to Read:  Hartmann and the Integration of Different Ways of Thinking by William I. Grossman, MD.

Click Here to Read:  Hierarchies, Boundaries and Representation in a Freudian Model of Mental Organization by William I. Grossman, M.D.

Click Here to Read:  Reflections on the Relationships of Introspection and Psycho-Analysis by William I. Grossman Originally published in the International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 48:16-31 (1967). Used by permission.

Click Here to Read: Knightmare in Armor: Reflections on Wilhelm Reich’s Contributions to Psychoanalysis Wiby lliam I. Grossman   Reprinted from Psychiatry, Vol. 39, No. 4, November 1976. Used by permission of the author.

Click Here to Read:  Notes on Masochism: A Discussion of the History and Development of a Psychoanalytic Concept by William I. Grossman, M.D.
 Originally appeared in 1986 Psychoanal. Q., 55:379-413 – used by permission.

Click Here to Read: Pain, Aggression, Fantasy, and Concepts of   Sadomasochism by William I. Grossman, M.D. Originally appeared in 1991 Psychoanal. Q., 60:22-51 – used by permission.

Click Here to Read: Some Perspectives on Relationships of Theory and Technique  by William I. Grossman, M.D.

Click Here to Read: Psychological Vicissitudes Of Theory In Clinical Work by
William I. Grossman. Originally appeared in 1995 Int. J. Psycho-Anal., 76:885-899 – used by permission.

 Click Here to Read:  Some Sources for a Slip in a Translation by Freud
William I. Grossman, M.D. Originally appeared in 1988 J. Amer. Psychoanal. Assn., 36:729-738 – used by permission.

The Rodent File

Click Here Read:  The Rodent File by Ann Appelbaum.

From Ann Appelbaum’s Intro:  I offer for your considernation a historical manuscript rescued from my files.  As an exercise in bureaucratic morality, I think it suitable for academic physicians to ponder.  The name of the hospital and names of all the particpants, except that of the rodent, have been changed.

Leo Rangell, The Journey of a Developed Freudian

 Click Here to Read:  Leo Rangell, The   Journey of a   Developed Freudian by Arthur Lynch and Arnold Richards.

This article was previously published as: Lynch, A. and Richards, A. (June 2010). Leo Rangell, The Journey of a Developed Freudian. The Psychoanalytic Review  97:3, pp. 361-391 and appears here with all requisite rights and permissions.

The article is used here with the permission of the National Psychological Association for Psychoanalysis. We would like to thank Dr. Alan Barnett, Editor of The Psychoanalytic Review for his help in this process.