A Reluctant Midas with Sharon Horowitz at IPTAR

L.J.Gould Center for Systems-Psychoanalytic Studies hosts
First Meeting of the Year
Monthly Socio-Analytic Case Conference
Wednesday, October 28, 2015, 11:30am-1:00pm
IPTAR West Conference room: 140 West 97th Street – NYC

Sharon Horowitz, Ph.D. A RELUCTANT MIDAS: Exploring the succession dilemmas posed when an organization or Firm is dependent on a “Super-Star” for top-tier performance.

Sharon Horowitz will use clinical vignettes to explore the “Super-Star’s” own sense of responsibility, as well as desires and burdens serving as a guide for organizational design. Continue reading A Reluctant Midas with Sharon Horowitz at IPTAR

Race as Relation with David Eng at IPTAR

davideng

Race as Relation presented by David L. Eng
Register Now
In conjunction with the New School for Social Research continues the series, Bringing Back the Revolution
Saturday, October 24, 2015
Elisabeth Young-Bruehl Memorial Lecture
Featuring David L. Eng presenting Race as Relation

David L. Eng is one of the country’s foremost theorists of race, gender, and sexuality from a psychoanalytic perspective. In 2000 he and Shinhee Han coauthored “A Dialogue on Racial Melancholia,” which appeared in Continue reading Race as Relation with David Eng at IPTAR

Consciousness and the Unconscious Mark Solms, Ph.D. with NYPSI

03EW YORK PSYCHOANALYTIC SOCIETY & INSTITUTE:
Arnold Pfeffer Center for Neuropsychoanalysis
Marianne and Nicholas Young Auditorium
247 East 82nd St., between 2nd & 3rd, NY, NY 10028
212-879-6900
www.psychoanalysis.org
www.nypsi.org

Saturday, October 3, 2015, 10 am – 12 pm, Consciousness and the Unconscious Mark Solms, Ph.D.
Discussant: Maggie Zellner, Ph.D. RSVP is appreciated but not necessary; first come, first-seated FREE.
Continue reading Consciousness and the Unconscious Mark Solms, Ph.D. with NYPSI

Special Report: Thirty-Three Dead By Yale Kramer

Special Report
Thirty-Three Dead
By Yale Kramer
Published 4/27/2007 12:08:17 AM
Many years ago — before the sixties, when activist reformers discovered the notion that mentally ill patients were an oppressed people, like Negroes (as blacks preferred to be called then), women, and homosexuals (as gay men were identified then), and decided that they must be set free from their sadistic doctors and nurses (deinstitutionalized) in order to become independent (homeless) — I was a resident physician studying psychiatry at Bellevue Psychiatric Hospital.

Continue reading Special Report: Thirty-Three Dead By Yale Kramer

Winnicott and Gender Madness with Adrienne Harris at AIP

THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR PSYCHOANALYSIS
OF THE KAREN HORNEY PSYCHOANALYTIC CENTER
Established in 1941
329 East 62nd Street — New York, NY 10065
(212) 838-8044 — aipkh@aol.com
———————————————————————————————-
Our Work Continues
———————————————————————————————-
SCIENTIFIC MEETING: Thursday, October 8, 2015 at 8:00 PM
Adrienne Harris: Winnicott and Gender Madness

In this presentation Dr. Harris will explore a not so well known vignette from Winnicott’s work with a middle-aged Continue reading Winnicott and Gender Madness with Adrienne Harris at AIP

‘The Theater of War’: Applying Greek Tragedies to Our Own and Myths of Mighty Women

lil'MythsCoverforBlog

Click Here to Read: Review: ‘The Theater of War’: Applying Greek Tragedies to Our Own by Abigail Zuger in The New York Times on September 28, 2015.

For more on the topic of myths and more
specifically myths about women from around the globe:

Click Here to Purchase:  Myths of the Mighty Women from IPBooks.net

Myths of Mighty Women: Their Application in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy  Edited by:  Arlene Kramer Richards and Lucille Spira (Karnac, 2015) highlights the importance of ancient western and eastern myths to today’s women. Continue reading ‘The Theater of War’: Applying Greek Tragedies to Our Own and Myths of Mighty Women

History Friday: Fernand Braudel

braudel

Click Here to Read: Fernand Braudel on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Fernand Braudel French historian and educator by Carole K. Fink on the Encyclopedia Britannica Website.

Click Here to Read:  Review of: Civilization and Capitalism 15th-18th Century: 1: The Structures of Everyday Life 2: The Wheels of Commerce 3: The Perspective of the World by Fernand Braudel translated from the French by Siân Reynolds Reviewed by Danny Yee on the DannyReviews website. Continue reading History Friday: Fernand Braudel