23/9/2023: 1st Hellenic-Italian Psychoanalytic Meeting

 

First psychoanalytic meeting between the Italian Psychoanalytic Society and the Greek Psychoanalytic Society

On the Sources of Psychoanalysis: The Ancient Greek Tragedy

Tragedy in the course of its evolution from the Dionysian to Euripides, with Aeschylus and Sophocles as intermediate links, carries in its body the traces of the history of the symbolic passage of the human from the primitive undifferentiated to the symbolized and from the pre-Oedipal, early conflict to the Oedipal.

The passage from the undifferentiated to the differentiated takes place in tragedy as in psychoanalysis through the dream process. Through the dream work, the subject moves from the non differentiating practiced incest into the dream incest – a potential space for a mourning processing of the relationship with the other.

Tragedy, like psychoanalysis, offers the opportunity each time for a kind of renegotiation of uncertain repression and uncertain symbolization, with a temporary release of the early, the primitive, the undifferentiated, the violent, the murderous, the cannibalistic, which do not recognize the prohibition of incest and merging with the object.

Psychoanalysis can be defined as the inheritor of ancient tragedy in that it activates its "tragic" transformative action, catharsis, extending its utility to the most common and important dimension of human experience, the dream.

Sarantis Thanopulos, president of the Italian Psychoanalytical Society

Christos Dervis, president of the Hellenic Psychoanalytical Society

 

Speakers

Athanasios Alexandridis, Giacomo Calvi, Angelique Costis, Chryssoula Giannoulaki, Dimitris Malidelis, Massimo De Mari, Haris Morikis, Lorena Preta, Andrea Rapisarda, Lena Telioni, Sarantis Thanopulos, Dionysios Tsiogris. Christos Zervis, Konstantinos Zervos


 

23/6/2023: Sigmund-Freud-Kulturpreis: Prof. Dagmar Herzog


 

2/5/2023: Sigourney Award - Help dispel the myth

 

Help Dispel the Myth

BY SHARING THE 'REAL DEAL'

Over the years, the The Sigourney Award Trust has learned that certain myths about The Sigourney Award persist. We're sharing Mary Sigourney's intent with you and asking you to share it with others.  

Myth: The Sigourney Award is limited to a particular form of psychoanalytic treatment whether it be academic, clinical, or applied. 

Mary's Intent: The Trust recognizes outstanding work that:
  • brings innovation to the field of psychoanalytic treatment or theory and/or;
  • applies psychoanalysis or psychoanalytic principles to other fields and disciplines including anthropology, arts and humanities, child development, criminology, law, medicine, philosophy, and sociology and/or;
  • uses psychoanalytic principles to transform the human experience for the better.
Are you aware of work that may qualify for The Sigourney Award? Share our How to Apply page with the individual, team, or organization or nominate them directly!

Applications Due July 31, 2023
Apply Now

 


 

24/5/2023 The James Mackeith Memorial Lecture 2023

 

STATES OF DENIAL
How democratic society manages to square its liberal values with the ‘war on terror’

Wednesday 24th May
8.00pm - 9.30pm (BST)

Speaker: Conor Gearty

Chair: David Bell

Hybrid event at The Institute of Psychoanalysis and Online via Zoom.

This event will be recorded and available to all registered participants for 1 week.


How did the ‘War on Terror’ so easily embed itself in our liberal system of government? It involves wholesale departures from the rule of law and the values of human dignity, human rights etc that the West says it is committed to.  But not only was it welcomed by liberal, democratic states in the Global North, it has since become embedded in our many legal systems, becoming (in a modified form it is true) part of our system of law rather than a temporary departure from it. This lecture explores the origins of our terrorism laws in, firstly, the legal responses by the colonial powers to resistance to their rule, and, secondly, in the deployment of the law to control Communist challenges to authority in liberal society.  The ‘enemy without’ (in the colonies) and ‘the enemy within’ (radical subversives at home) have been with us since before the start of the democratic era. The ‘war on terror’ was building on a long tradition of squaring illiberal treatment of the other with the celebration of the liberal values of the rest of us.  The door to the extremism of our contemporary anti-terrorism laws has been open as long as we have had liberalism and democracy.


Conor Gearty is Professor of human rights law at LSE Law School. He has published widely on terrorism, civil liberties and human rights. Conor is also a barrister and was a founder member of Matrix chambers, from where he continues to practice. He was Director of LSE’s Centre for the Study of Human Rights (2002-2009)


JAMES MACKEITH, OBE, who died in 2007, was an outstanding Forensic Psychiatrist who dedicated himself to Human Rights issues and to the collaboration between his field and psychoanalysis.


REFUND POLICY: Tickets are fully refundable until 14 days before the lecture, after which time no refunds will be issued.

Concession tickets are available, for students, BPAS candidates and NHS trainees and nurses. Please email [email protected] if you are unsure if you qualify for a concession ticket.

Views and opinions expressed by speakers are their own and do not represent the views or opinions of the Institute, event organisers or other speakers. We expect delegates to respect the confidentiality of clinical material discussed in our events. The content must not be recorded, conveyed or disseminated in any format and participants must not share access to the event with non-registered participants.

 

 
When
May 24th, 2023 8:00 PM through  9:30 PM
 
Location
Hybrid Event, online via Zoom
& In person at The Institute of Psychoanalysis
Byron House
112A Shirland Road
London, W9 2BT
United Kingdom
 
Contact
 
Event Fee(s)
Standard In Person £ 30.00
Concession In Person £ 20.00
Standard Online via Zoom £ 30.00
Concesssion Online via Zoom £ 20.00

2-4/6/2023: Out of place

THINKING ON THE BORDER: Third joint conference of twelve psychoanalytic societies

"Out of place"

Istanbul 2-4 June

Organized by the İstanbul Psychoanalysis Association and the Psike İstanbul- İstanbul Psychoanalytical Training, Research and Development Association 

 

 

Dear Colleagues,

The world is getting loose, everything considered as being in the proper place is being shattered. Now, it has been nearly 100 years after what Freud said about the war (1915, 1933) and we again witness how the war and destruction broken out very close to us lead to social, cultural and spiritual catastrophes. Millions of people have to look for a new house far away from their homelands, the lives are being suspended on the borders. In such times, a mode of out-of-placeness sets the tone of the life.

Edward Said expressed his relation to his homeland and his intense emotions about having a homeland as such: “the homeland is where my family and friends exist non-problematically, without questioning why or how they are present there”. So, based on an exile in our day when the repeated traumas are enacted and thus the inspiration coming from this narration of E. Said, we have decided to arrange our Thinking on Border: International Psychoanalysis Conference to be held in İstanbul in 2023 under the theme of ‘Out of Place’.

Being out of place is not only experienced in the context of a physical place. Like an epidemic, many people do not feel home when they live in their houses.  The tangible world, the touchable bodies and phantasies lead the way to the virtual lands and this mode of being everywhere is turning into the mode of being nowhere. Living and working styles, positions in gender and sexuality, and forms of social and emotional association are changing rapidly. Within all these tensions, narcissism of little differences is being crystallized due to a search for a shelter and ground and the identities are becoming monuments. In this flow, the world is moving away. The livable world is about to come to an end. The civilization keeps moving in a somehow familiar discontent. 

We invite you to our İstanbul meeting to make room for the horrors of the war that we have witnessed, exile and migration amidst looking for a home and a path and those on borders and those wandering beyond the borders; to discuss how the psychoanalysis positions itself in the face of the oppression of the reality flopped down on us; to psychoanalytically problematize various phenomena, visions and associations of being out-of-place and think on their reflections on clinical sphere together in this conference under the tension of internal and external realities.  

On behalf of Committees of Scientific Programs and Arranging Local

Respectfully yours,

Ferhan Özenenİstanbul Psychoanalysis Association

Yeşim KorkutPsike İstanbul- İstanbul Psychoanalytical Training, Research and Development Association

 

Contact: [email protected]

Scientific program, registration information and other details will also be shared.


 

9-11/6/2023: "Ferenczi 150 Budapest". Ferenczi 150th Anniversary International Conference


 

11/3/2023: The work of Rosine Perelberg

 


 

23/11/2022: EPF Award for Distinguished Contribution to Psychoanalysis

Annonce

Nous avons le grand plaisir d’annoncer que la FEP, par décision du   

Conseil du 4 novembre 2022 décerne le

“EPF Award for Distinguished Contribution to Psychoanalysis”

(L´Award de la FEP pour une contribution exceptionelle à la psychanalyse) 

au

Docteur Haydée Faimberg. 

 

La FEP honore Haydée Faimberg non seulement pour ses contributions excellentes au développement continu de la théorie et de la pratique psychanalytiques, mais aussi pour son engagement constant au cours de plusieurs décennies en faveur d’un approfondissement des échanges cliniques au sein de la FEP.

Dans le domaine de la théorie psychanalytique, à la fois son travail sur une compréhension interculturelle de la formation de concepts psychanalytiques, ses recherches sur le télescopage des générations et l’écoute de la transmission de liens narcissiques entre générations, et sur les modèles de résolution des conflits intergénérationnels n’ont cessé de se révéler comme essentiels.

Quant à la clinique, Haydée Faimberg a élaboré le concept de “l’écoute de l’écoute”. Dans le cadre de la situation clinique, ce concept, toujours employé en lien avec l'association libre et l'attention en égal suspens, constitutives de la méthode psychanalytique, est complémentaire d’autres concepts, comme celui de complexe d'Œdipe, mais il élargit surtout l'écoute psychanalytique.

A l’aide de ses concepts, Haydée Faimberg a élaboré une méthode de discussion particulière au sein d’un groupe de psychanalystes, qui permet de comprendre pourquoi un présentateur de matériel clinique travaille comme il/elle le fait, et de découvrir les hypothèses de base sur lesquelles il/elle et les autres participants s’appuient dans leur discussion. Ici, et uniquement à cette fin particulière, Haydée Faimberg met en œuvre “l’écoute de l’écoute”, une méthode pour discuter en groupe une présentation clinique.

Haydée Faimberg a formulé son approche de la reconnaissance interculturelle en ces termes marquants :

“[C'est] découvrir pourquoi nous travaillons comme nous le faisons. Et dépasser le seul critère de dire que tel analyste est bon parce qu'il travaille comme moi... Il vaut mieux reconnaître l'altérité qu'idéaliser le même”.

C’est dans cet esprit que Haydée Faimberg a lancé le premier groupe de travail pour la discussion du matériel clinique à la FEP en 2002, et a continué ensuite à présider les groupes de “l’ écoute de l’écoute” lors des conférences annuelles de la FEP. La méthode qu'elle a développée a été employée par des sociétés psychanalytiques en Europe, en Amérique du Nord, en Amérique latine et lors des congrès de l'API.

Haydée Faimberg est membre titulaire de la Société Psychanalytique de Paris (SPP), et vit à Paris. Elle est également membre titulaire de l'Association psychanalytique argentine (APA) et membre d´ honneur de la Société psychanalytique tchèque (ČPS), et en juin 2019, elle est devenue la première “International Distinguished Fellow “de la Société britannique de psychanalyse (BPS). Elle est membre titulaire de l´API.

Elle a reçu le Haskell Norman Award (2005) et le prestigieux Mary Sigourney Award (2013), tous deux décernés pour “des contributions exceptionnelles en tant que clinicienne, enseignante et théoricienne de la psychanalyse”.

Nous sommes également très heureux de l'honorer en lui décernant l´Award de la FEP pour une contribution exceptionnelle à la psychanalyse.L´Award de la FEP a été décerné pour la première fois en 2015 à Anne-Marie Sandler et au professeur Daniel Widlöcher. Avec la remise de l´Award de la FEP à Haydée Faimberg, nous renouons avec cette tradition.

La cérémonie de remise de l´Award aura lieu lors de la 36ième Conférence annuelle de la FEP, qui se tiendra à Cannes, du 24 au 26 mars 2023.

Au nom de l´Exécutif de la FEP

Dr Heribert Blass

Président de la FEP


 

18/11/2022: Marie Bonaparte – Sigmund Freud: Correspondance intégrale 1925-1939

The Paris Psychoanalytic Society, SPP and Sigmund Freud Library, BSF (Cécile Marcoux, curator, Bernard Chervet, BSF Committee) have the pleasure to announce the publication of the 900 unpublished letters between Freud and Marie-Bonaparte. This first publication in the world is produced in French by Rémy Amouroux and Olivier Mannoni, and published by Flammarion.

 

In 1925, Princess Marie Bonaparte went to Vienna to consult Professor Sigmund Freud. This meeting would prove to be « the greatest event of my life », said the great-grandniece of Napoleon I, Princess of Greece and Denmark.

Over fourteen years, they exchanged nearly nine hundred letters until the death of the founder of psychoanalysis in 1939. Preserved in the Library of Congress in Washington, this collection of letters is the last large corpus of Freudian correspondence still unpublished.

Fascinating from beginning to end, this correspondence gives us valuable information on the introduction of psychoanalysis in France, and portrays a declining world in which two remarkable protagonists live. For between the princess who came to cure her depression and one of the most influential intellectuals of the century, a friendship was born that soon went beyond the framework of therapy. Their discussions show how Freud is alternately seduced, amused and sometimes weary of this patient who always wanted to live her love life to the fullest and questioned Freud's conceptions of women, at a time when the quest for female pleasure remained deeply subversive.

The "last of the Bonapartes", as she liked to call herself, far from being the fervent disciple she has sometimes been portrayed as, demonstrates throughout the pages a daring freedom of thought. Regardless of their disagreements, Freud saw her as a loyal student. In fact, she never betrayed him and put her fortune at the service of the Paris Psychoanalytical Society (SPP), which she helped to create and, with the help of many supporters, came to his aid to help him leave Nazi Austria in 1938.

Rémy Amouroux has edited and written the critical apparatus of this complete correspondence. He holds a PhD in history of psychology and is an associate professor at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS). He teaches at the Institute of Psychology at the University of Lausanne. He is the author of numerous articles and books on the history of psychology and on Marie Bonaparte, including Marie Bonaparte, entre biologie et freudisme, Paris, PUR, 2012.

Olivier Mannoni is a German to French translator. Familiar with Freud's work, he has translated his correspondence with Max Eitington (Hachette, 2009), Anna Freud (Fayard, 2012) and Minna Bernays (Seuil, 2015) and worked on new translations of Freud's texts in Frebc, including Le rêve de l'injection faite à Irma (The Interpretation of Dreams), L'Homme aux loups (From the History of an Infantile Neurosis (the Wolfman case history)), Pour une introduction du narcissisme (On Narcissism), L'Inconscient (The Unconscious), La Féminité (Femininity), L'Amour de transfert (The love of transference), published by Payot.


 

14/6/2022: THE 24-volume Revised Standard Edition of the Complete psychological Works of Sigmund Freud

The British Psychoanalytical Society Partners with Rowman & LIttlefield to publish THE 24-volume Revised Standard Edition of the Complete psychological Works of Sigmund Freud

The British Psychoanalytical Society (Incorporating the Institute of Psychoanalysis) and Rowman & Littlefield, an imprint of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc., of Lanham, Maryland, announced today a co-publishing agreement to release the RevisedStandard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud under the executive editorship of Professor Mark Solms.

Commissioned by the British Psychoanalytical Society, the new 24-volume set preserves the original Standard Edition English translation and notes by James Strachey, published between 1953 and 1966, while adding a new layer of retranslations with explanatory annotations under the editorial leadership of Professor Solms. The Revised Standard Edition also presents Freud material that has not previously been translated into English. The 24-volume set will be released in the summer of 2023.

 

Rosine Jozef Perelberg, President of the British Psychoanalytical Society, said, “With this publication, Freud’s complete works will again be available to a wide readership. Carefully corrected and updated with important scholarship by Professor Solms over the past 30 years, the much-awaited Revised Standard Edition will be an indispensable tool for psychoanalysts, psychotherapists, psychiatrists, neurologists, and philosophers, as well as those working in the humanities.”

Julie Kirsch, Vice President and Publisher for Rowman & Littlefield, said, “Sigmund Freud forever changed our understanding of human thought, behavior, and culture. We are proud to bring this important revision of the standard English translation of his psychological works to scholars across the humanities and social sciences, clinicians and practitioners in the helping professions, and the general public around the globe.”

 

About the British Psychoanalytical Society (Incorporating the Institute of Psychoanalysis) www.psychoanalysis.org.uk

Founded in 1913, The British Psychoanalytical Society is home to an international community of professionals dedicated to helping people enhance their lives through an intensive talking therapy, psychoanalysis. The Institute of Psychoanalysis is the outward face and training body of the British Psychoanalytical Society. As a Component Society of the International Psychoanalytical Association, the Institute of Psychoanalysis manages a rigorous training programme to qualify new psychoanalysts incorporating all traditions. The Institute engages with related disciplines and wider audiences through events and conferences and maintains an extensive archive of psychoanalytic resources.

 

About Rowman & Littlefield Publishers (R&L) www.rowman.com

Rowman & Littlefield, an imprint of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc., is based outside Washington, DC. An independent publisher for 73 years, our publishing program includes nonfiction, textbooks, academic scholarship and reference, and professional titles, as well as partnerships with associations, societies, and professional organizations across the humanities and social sciences. The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc., (RLPG) is distributed by and owns National Book Network (NBN), which offers distribution services to other book publishers. RLPG also includes trade imprints including Globe Pequot, Stackpole Books, and Prometheus Books, and K-12 education publisher Sundance Newbridge Publishing.


 

11/05/2022: The Sigourney Award

The Sigourney Award honors outstanding psychoanalytic work worldwide. Recipients of The Sigourney Award join a notable community, garner international recognition for their work, and receive a substantial cash prize.

Work eligible for The Sigourney Award-2022 includes: 

  • Work completed between 2011-2021 that substantially contributed to psychoanalysis or psychoanalytic thought
  • Innovative, insightful, or groundbreaking work that advances the understanding or positive influence of psychoanalytic thought and principles
  • Work by individuals, groups, or organizations from all regions, across the globe in 150+ languages via Google Translate

 

Dates:              Applications open from March 1, 2022 – July 31, 2022

Link:                How to Apply — The Sigourney Award


Busting Sigourney Award Myths

Unsure if your work is eligible for The Sigourney Award-2022? Over the years recipients, nominees, and supporters have asked questions about The Sigourney Award, the prize that honors outstanding psychoanalytic work worldwide. Our hope is to dispel any misunderstandings about Mary Sigourney's intent for The Sigourney Award. Read on to dispel common misunderstandings about the prize.

Myth 1:  I can't win the Award until I've worked for 20+ years.
The Sigourney Award has never been a lifetime achievement Award. In fact, Mary Sigourney specifically required that eligible work must be accomplished within 10 years of the Award year. For 2022, only work completed between 2011– 2021 can be considered.

Myth 2:  I can only apply every three years, in English.
There is no longer a geographic rotation for applications. Organizations, groups, and individuals may submit work for consideration from any place in the world, in any year, and in more than 150 languages (via our online translation).

Myth 3:  My work must be nominated for the Award.
You do NOT need a nomination to apply. Nominations are welcome, however all applicants, whether the work is nominated or submitted directly, complete the same application process to help ensure the Award process is equitable. Use the Nomination Form to nominate the work of an individual, team, or organization. 

Myth 4:  The Sigourney Award is limited to a particular form of psychoanalytic treatment whether it be academic, clinical, or applied.

The truth: The Sigourney Award Trust recognizes outstanding work that:

  • brings innovation to the field of psychoanalytic treatment or theory and/or;
  • applies psychoanalysis or psychoanalytic principles to other fields and disciplines including anthropology, arts and humanities, law, medicine, philosophy, psychology, and social justice and/or;
  • uses psychoanalytic principles to transform the human experience for the better.

If you believe your work or that of another individual, team, or organization is deserving of The Sigourney Award, please visit or share this page: How to Apply — The Sigourney Award. Applications are due by July 31, 2022.


 

13/6/2021: Spanish language psychoanalysts encounters (book)

 

 

 

First Edition, 2021

Place of Publication: Madrid

Publisher: APM–Psimática, 377 pages

ISBN 9-788412-220704

 

 

 

Contents:

This first book collects the production of five years of work and materialization of a psychoanalytic thought that has been nourished by the presentations, in Spanish, of prestigious psychoanalysts who live in different geographical locations. These rich and fruitful encounters, which began at the Casa de América (Madrid) in January 2012, have been an important space for exchange, open to plurality and the influence of changes in our socio-cultural environment, which has become a reference for contemporary theoretical-clinical thought in our own language.

Teresa Olmos de Paz (compiler), psychoanalyst, is the former director of the Institute of Psychoanalysis and is a full member, with training functions, in the Madrid Psychoanalytical Association, of which she was president from January 2017 to December 2019. She is also a member of the Forum for Adolescent Psychoanalysis of the European Federation of Psychoanalysis. Among her publications are, notably: Structures and/or borderline states in children, adolescents and adults (with Carlos Paz and M.L. Pelento), Volumes I–II–III. She has been published in national and international psychoanalytical reviews, particularly The International Journal of Psychoanalysis. She received the first Annual Psychoanalysis Book Prize in 1992.


 

24/2/2021: IPA-Price for the Covid-19 Crisis Commission of the Madrid Psychoanalytical Association

The Covid-19 Crisis Commission of the Madrid Psychoanalytical Association has been awarded the Second Prize for Community by the IPA and its Health Committee in 2020. This honor was given in recognition of the work that this project has carried out, both on behalf of the community and of the field of psychoanalysis during the world pandemic. The prize values, in particular, the speed with which the Commission was established and its support of private citizens and medical staff, bringing together both members of the IPA and analysts in training to offer rapid interventions at no cost to the patients.

Fur further information (in Spanish) click here !


 

23/2/2021: "The guests of the Ego. Identifications and disidentifications in the psychoanalytic clinic"

 

 

 

First Edition, 2018

Place of Publication: Madrid.

Publisher: APM–Biblioteca Nueva

158 pages. ISBN 978-84-17408-01-5

 

 

Contents:

Identification is a concept that runs through psychoanalytic theory like a guiding thread, and is a basic notion for understanding the structuring of the subject. We confront the complexity of identification through the development of the psychoanalytic process; identifications manifest themselves in different ways in the patient-analyst link within the process known as transference. And it is in this part of the relationship where the interplay of identifications and disidentifications arises, leading to the creation of new identifications.

One goal of analysis is the possibility of deconstructing those identifications that alienate the subject. These questions are considered throughout the chapters of this book, which compiles a series of articles by prestigious contemporary psychoanalysts working in this area. Among them are:  Maurizio Bálsamo, Thomas Ogden, Ruggero Levy, Luis Kancyer and Rachel Blass, with an introduction by Teresa Olmos de Paz.

Teresa Olmos de Paz, psychoanalyst, is the former director of the Institute of Psychoanalysis and is a full member, with training functions, in the Madrid Psychoanalytical Association, of which she was president from January 2017 to December 2019. She is also a member of the Forum for Adolescent Psychoanalysis of the European Federation of Psychoanalysis. Among her publications are, notably: Structures and/or borderline states in children, adolescents and adults (with Carlos Paz and M.L. Pelento), Volumes I–II–III. She has been published in national and international psychoanalytical reviews, particularly The International Journal of Psychoanalysis. She received the first Annual Psychoanalysis Book Prize in 1992.


 

7/2/2021: The South African Psychoanalytical Association (SAPA) wins the Sigourney Award 2020

The South African Psychoanalytical Association was one of the four recipients of the 2020 Sigourney Award for the advancement of psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic thought. This is an important acknowledgement of the SAPA's contribution towards enhancing diversity and inclusivity in the increased reach of psychoanalytic thought, education, training and treatment in Africa. 

For those colleagues who are interested, here is a link to the press release of the Sigourney Trust: https://www.sigourneyaward.org/newsandevents/2021/1/11/press-release-for-the-sigourney-award-2020


 

6/2/2021: Book "Dear Candidate..."

Edited by Fred Busch

First edition, published 2020

eBook: Published 24 November 2020

Pub. Location London

Imprint Routledge

Pages 194

eBook ISBN 9781003106487

In this first-of-kind book, senior psychoanalysts from around the world offer personal reflections on their own training, what it was like to become a psychoanalyst, and what they would like most to convey to the candidate of today.

With forty-two personal letters to candidates, this edited collection helps analysts in training and those recently entering the profession to reflect upon what it means to be a psychoanalytic candidate and enter the profession. Letters tackle the anxieties, ambiguities, complications, and pleasures faced in these tasks. From these reflections, the book serves as a guide through this highly personal, complex, and meaningful experience and helps readers consider the many different meanings of being a candidate in a psychanalytic institute.

Perfect for candidates and psychoanalytic educators, this book inspires analysts at all levels to think, once again, about this impossible but fascinating profession and to consider their own psychoanalytic development.

Click here to go to the presentation webpage of this book


 

30/01/2021: "Contemporary Kleinian Psychoanalysis" in Bulgarian

The book Contemporary Kleinian Psychoanalysis is the first systematic presentation of Kleinian psychoanalysis to the Bulgarian reader, published in January 2021. 

All the papers were translated by members of the Bulgarian Psychoanalytic Society, and Svetlozar Vassilev is the editor and author of the preface and introductory part.  

This is a valuable collection of papers that reflect the collaboration between Kleinian psychoanalysts in Britain and Europe, on the one hand, and their Bulgarian colleagues on the other, which has developed over many years.  Its content will be of interest to all who are interested in contemporary views of the unconscious, internal objects, the Oedipus complex, projective identification, transference, and countertransference. The authors are divided into two groups - the first consists of world-renowned British experts such as Hanna Segal, Patricia Daniel, Edith Hargreaves, Robert Hinshelwood, Eileen McGinley, and Cyril Couve. The second are psychoanalysts from Europe such as Antonia Grimalt (Spain), Synnove Wallin (Sweden), Ilva Fligar (Sweden), Orlin Todorov (Bulgaria) who integrate Kleinian ideas into clinical practice and the culture of their countries. 

Click here to go to the web presentation of the book


 

3/9/2020: Sigmund Freud Museum in Vienna is reopened

On August 29, the doors of Berggasse 19 opened to visitors again after 18-month of renovation and reconstruction.

The “birthplace of psychoanalysis”, where the famous physician, psychoanalyst, and thinker Sigmund Freud lived and worked for nearly half a century, offers a modernized and enlarged museum infrastructure, including a new foyer, shop, and café, all made wheelchair accessible. Europe’s largest library of psychoanalysis is newly renovated and serves as a platform for research and communication.

The architectural concept was developed by Atelier Czech, Walter Angonese, and ARTEC Architects. 

Three new permanent exhibitions, a presentation of contemporary art at the Showroom Berggasse 19, and a new special exhibition all inform on Freud’s multi-faceted cultural heritage. They provide a wide range of information on Freud’s life and work, on the historical development of psychoanalysis and offer critical perspectives on its current issues, including its importance for society and the arts. The history of the house Berggasse 19 and the fates of its inhabitants from 1880 to date will be presented in the newly constructed stairwell.

Sigmund Freud Museum looking forward to your visit! Learn more about the safety measures for your visit, buy tickets online and get more information about permanent and special exhibitions on the museum website: https://www.freud-museum.at/de/


 

2/9/2020: FEPAL Manifest "Against Violence. Against Structural Racism and in Defense of Democracy and Human Rights"

 

 

26/07/2020: The Empty Couch: Love and Mourning in Times of Confinement

The Empty Couch: Love and Mourning in Times of Confinement 

A film created by Rosine Jozef Perelberg

Click here to see it on Youtube !

 

This film is an homage of the British Psychoanalytical Society to frontline workers of the National Health Service (NHS), and to the solidarity expressed by psychoanalysts during these difficult times.

 

 

 


 

16/07/2020: 400 Italian psychoanalysts faced with the reality of Covid

Anna Maria Nicolò Italian Psychanalytic Society - SPI

In March 2020 the Italian State decided to lock down the whole nation because of the Covid-19 epidemic. In Lombardy especially, the wealthiest region in the country, the daily update announced a terrifying increase in cases and deaths. The intensive care units of one of Europe’s most industrialised regions were unable to accommodate new patients and it was whispered that health workers were being forced to choose who had the right to be admitted, which meant privileging those who were likeliest to survive. Televisions and newspapers bombarded audiences with their announcements of the worsening defeat by an invisible enemy never imagined before. The population was terrified and confused. Some colleagues had already contracted the virus, and most of us had started to work remotely...

To read or download the full article please click here !


 

27/05/2016: Frontier Psychoanalyst Radio: Politics, society and the individual

Podcasts episodes 1-7

David Morgan presents

Members of the British Psychoanalytic Society in discussion with guests from Academia in conjunction with Resonance 104.4 FM and on the web and on replay on the station website a programme bringing complex thinking to contemporary socio-political concerns and dilemmas.
 
Some of Britian’s leading psychoanalysts examine the relationship between psychoanalysis and politics, it asks whether psychoanalysis can help us understand and how we might come to terms with the urgent issues of these troubled times. David Morgan, David Bell, Sally Weintrobe, Phillip Stokoe Jonathan Sklar are joined by discussants to examine whether psychoanalytical insights can illuminate the relationship between social and economic forces and the individual psyche; whether the theoretical insights developed in the clinic are applicable to issues of power, ideology, rationality and control.