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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240313T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240313T210000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240207T201037Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240212T205333Z
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SUMMARY:Child & Adolescent Psychotherapy Training Program In person Open House
DESCRIPTION:An Open House at the Institute with clinical presentation\,\nAm I Really Here? Psychotherapy with an Adolescent Boy\nby Brooke Marlin\, LCSW\nWednesday evening\, March 13th\n7:30-9:00 pm\n20 West 74th Street (between Central Park West & Columbus Avenue)\, New York City 10023\n\nThis presentation will follow the treatment of Michael\, an adolescent male diagnosed with ADHD. Throughout his childhood and adolescence\, Michael has struggled with peer relationships\, but has found refuge in the world of online gaming. During the treatment\, the therapist\, Michael\, and Michael’s parents attempt to understand Michael’s gaming behavior from a range of perspectives. The therapist tracks her vacillation between a “frustrated state” and an “expansive state” towards Michael\, and works to support the parents in stepping into an “expansive state” alongside her.\nFaculty\, graduates and current students will be present to answer questions about the CAPTP training program. Light refreshments will be served.\n\nABOUT THE PRESENTER\nBrooke Marlin is an LCSW who runs a group practice in Astoria\, Queens\, focusing primarily on children\, adolescents\, and parents. She is currently a third-year candidate in the Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy Training Program at the William Alanson White Institute. Prior to training at White\, Brooke completed the 2-year Trauma Program at the Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy\, as well as a 1-year Combined Child and Adolescent Fellowship at the Washington Baltimore Center for Psychoanalysis\, and the National Child Traumatic Stress Network’s Child Trauma Program at the Silberman School of Social Work. She is trained in Level 1 of Internal Family Systems.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/child-adolescent-psychotherapy-training-program-in-person-open-house-2/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240403T203000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240403T220000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240321T180330Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240321T180408Z
UID:10000117-1712176200-1712181600@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:LGBTQ Study Group - JOY LADIN\, PHD
DESCRIPTION:Gender Identity is Just the Beginning: \nExploring the Creative Potential of Trans Perspectives and Experiences \n  \n Wednesday\, April\, 3 2024 \n8:30 – 10:00 PM (EST) \nDescription: Trans\, nonbinary\, and gender nonconforming people tend to spend a lot of time in and out of therapy figuring out our gender identities\, how to live them\, and how to defend ourselves against external and internalized challenges to living as who we are. This essential work can be so consuming that we and therapists who accompany us on our journeys may not consider the creative potential of trans experiences and perspectives beyond and between binary gender categories and the assumptions\, ways of life\, and worldviews based upon them – potential I have explored in many of my eleven collections of poetry. This talk will use a selection of those poems to demonstrate different ways to express trans experience and use the perspectives it opens to reimagine not just my personal gender identity but what it means\, and what it can mean\, to be human. \nJoy Ladin\, Ph.D.\, has long worked at the tangled intersection of literature and transgender identity\, publishing a memoir of gender transition\, National Jewish Book Award finalist Through the Door of Life; a groundbreaking book-length work of trans theology\, Lambda Literary and Triangle Award finalist\, The Soul of the Stranger; and ten books of poetry\, including Lambda Literary finalist Transmigration and Impersonation and National Jewish Book Award winner The Book of Anna. Two new books\, Once Out of Nature\, essays on how gender is changing\, and her eleventh collection of poems\, Family\, are forthcoming from Persea in 2024. Her writing has been recognized with a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship\, a Fulbright Scholarship\, an American Council of Learned Societies Research Fellowship\, and a Hadassah Brandeis Institute Research Fellowship\, among other honors. Her writing is available at joyladin.wordpress.com \n                                            For inquiries regarding The LGBTQ Study Group please contact co-chairs: \n  \nEsin Egit: e.egit@wawhite.org \nWilla France: poetadmiral@earthlink.net
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/lgbtq-study-group-joy-ladin-phd/
CATEGORIES:Modern Layout,Public
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wawhite.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/LGBTQ-colors-lines.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240404T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240404T150000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240322T180112Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240322T180112Z
UID:10000118-1712237400-1712242800@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Halloween Underground: New York Subway Portraits with Seymour Licht\, MD
DESCRIPTION:PRESENTED BY THE ARTIST STUDY GROUP OF THE PSYCHOTHERAPY SERVICE FOR PEOPLE IN THE ARTS\nTHURSDAY\, APRIL 4th FROM 1:30-3:00PM/Eastern\nHalloween Underground: New York  Subway Portraits with Seymour Licht\, MD\n\nAttend in person or online as follows:\nIn person at the Institute\, 20 West 74th Street\, between CPW & Columbus Avenues\nOnline via Zoom at: https://wawhite.zoom.us/j/8180152948?pwd=cDkrUTlMSndQendyZzhnc054c0tpQT09\nPlease RSVP to attend: fvdillon@gmail.com\n  \nABOUT THIS PRESENTATION AND ITS SPEAKER\nSeymour Licht’s book\, Halloween Underground transports the viewer into the realm of the uncanny and phantasmagoric. In his talk\, Licht will present his 20-year odyssey of documenting costumed shapeshifters in the New York subway and highlight the themes of identity\, liminality\, communal ritual\, and the boundary between life and death.  Halloween Underground is his tribute to the creative\, resourceful New Yorkers who on October 31st transform themselves and the mass transit system into an otherworldly spectacle.\nA psychiatrist in private practice in Manhattan and an award-winning photographer\, Seymour Licht’s work has been featured in The New York Times\, CNN\, The Guardian\, The Paris Review\, and the New York Post\, among many other media outlets. He trained at Mt. Sinai Medical Center and studied photography at the International Center of Photography.\n\nPlease join us for this subterranean journey and discussion!\nFrances V. Dillon\, MSW\, and Eric Dammann\, PhD\, are Co-Directors of The Artist Study Group\n 
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/halloween-underground-new-york-subway-portraits-with-seymour-licht-md/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240405T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240405T133000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240201T194358Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240729T153118Z
UID:10000110-1712318400-1712323800@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Micro-Traumatic Experience: Therapeutic Approaches  to Healing Cumulative Toxic Effects
DESCRIPTION:with MARGARET CRASTNOPOL\, PhD\nA 4-part online mini-course for clinicians at all levels\, to explore and recognize micro-traumatic functioning\, while learning how to work with patients in resolving these patterns.\nHeld online on Fridays beginning April 5th.\n6 CE credits are available upon completion\n  \nABOUT THE COURSE\nCertain subtle types of psychic injury\, called “micro-trauma\,” can mount up over time\, eroding a person’s sense of well-being while distorting character development and interpersonal functioning. Dr. Crastnopol draws upon the theoretical framework offered in her book\,  Micro-trauma: A Psychoanalytic Understanding of Cumulative Psychic Injury (Routledge\, 2015)\,  and shares her most recent thinking along these lines. In this four-session online course\, she focuses on and helps clinicians identify specific patterns of micro-traumatic functioning and their impacts as they play out in everyday life and in the analytic engagement itself.\nSome examples of these patterns are “connoisseurship gone awry\,” “uneasy intimacy\,” “unkind cutting back\,” and “psychic airbrushing.”  Participants will explore their own clinical experiences with micro- trauma and gain an understanding of how to identify and work to resolve such problematic patterns for those in their practice.\n\nABOUT MARGARET CRASTNOPOL\, PhD\nMargaret Crastnopol\, PhD\, is an Analyst of Candidates (“Training Analyst”)\,  Consulting Analyst\, and Faculty Member of the Seattle Psychoanalytic Society and Institute. She is also a Supervisor of Psychotherapy and Faculty at the William Alanson White Institute.  Dr. Crastnopol is an associate editor of Psychoanalytic Dialogues\, and she also serves on the editorial board of Contemporary Psychoanalysis. Having recently finished her tenure\, she is a long-term former member of the executive committee and the board of directors of the International Association for Relational Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy. She is the author of Micro-trauma:  A Psychoanalytic Understanding of Cumulative Psychic Injury\, (Routledge\, 2015)\, and of numerous other published works. Dr. Crastnopol is in private practice for the treatment of individuals and couples in Seattle\, New York\, Idaho\, and elsewhere\, working remotely and in person.  She offers individual and group supervision or consultation for those in the United States and various locations abroad.\n\nCLASS SCHEDULE\nHeld online on Fridays\, from 12Noon-1:30PM/Eastern\,  on the following dates: April 5th\, 12th\, 26th & May 3rd.\n\nCOURSE COSTS:\nProfessionals: Early Registration $475\, available now through March 15th. Starting March 16th\, $550.\nCandidates & students:  $300\nLEARNING OBJECTIVES\nBy the completion of this course\, students will be able to:  \nI. Enumerate and describe certain specific mechanisms of toxic functioning\, including “unkind cutting back\,” “connoisseurship gone awry\,” “little murders\,” etc.\nII. Identify signs within the psychoanalytic psychotherapeutic relationship that such patterns are being replayed.\nIII. Articulate and implement various effective strategies for repairing micro-traumatic damage to the patient’s sense of well-being and self-worth.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/micro-traumatic-experience-therapeutic-approaches-to-healing-cumulative-toxic-effects/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240502T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240502T150000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240410T164934Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240410T174001Z
UID:10000119-1714656600-1714662000@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:A Woman I Once Knew  with Rosalind Fox Solomon\, Photographer
DESCRIPTION:PRESENTED BY THE ARTIST STUDY GROUP OF THE PSYCHOTHERAPY SERVICE FOR PEOPLE IN THE ARTS\nTHURSDAY\, MAY 2nd FROM 1:30-3:00PM/Eastern\nA Woman I Once Knew with Rosalind Fox Solomon\, Photographer\nwith Claire Basescu\, Ph.D.\, Interlocutor\n  \nAttend in person or online as follows:\nIn person at the Institute\, 20 West 74th Street\, between CPW & Columbus Avenues\nOnline via Zoom at:  https://wawhite.zoom.us/j/8180152948?pwd=cDkrUTlMSndQendyZzhnc054c0tpQT09\nPlease RSVP to attend: fvdillon@gmail.com\n\n\nABOUT THIS PRESENTATION AND ITS SPEAKER\nRosalind Fox Solomon\, internationally acclaimed photographer and world traveler will present a slide overview of her remarkable 56 year career and then focus on the self-portraits and text from her new book\, A Woman I Once Knew.  Solomon explores the periodic depressions and euphoric experiences in other cultures that defined her extraordinary life and shaped her empathic approach to photography.  Her presentation will demonstrate the rigorousness and sensitivity of self-examination which suggests the boundless possibilities of taking the self as subject.\nWhile living in Chattanooga\, Tennessee\, Rosalind Fox Solomon began a new life as a photographer at age 38.  Studying with Lisette Model in the early 1970’s\, she honed the photographic voice which would mark the prodigious half-century of work to follow.\nSolomon’s photographs have been included in selected artist lectures\, press and print\, sound and motion and several exhibitions at The Museum of Modern Art.  She was awarded the International Center of Photography Lifetime Achievement Award in 2019.\nVisit her website at:  www.rosalindfoxsolomon.com\n\nABOUT OUR INTERLOCUTER\nClaire Basescu\, PhD\, is a graduate\, faculty member\, and supervisor of psychoanalysis at the William Alanson White Institute. She is currently teaching “Credo:  My Psychoanalysis”\, a writing workshop for its main Psychoanalytic program Candidates.\nJoin us for a memorable presentation and discussion of one artist’s lifetime of looking outward and inward!\nFrances V. Dillon\, MSW\, and Eric Dammann\, PhD\, are Co-Directors of The Artist Study Group
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/a-woman-i-once-knew-with-rosalind-fox-solomon-photographer/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240503T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240503T140000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20230810T152003Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250207T160731Z
UID:10000091-1714737600-1714744800@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:CAROL GILLIGAN\, PhD\, NAOMI SNIDER\, LLM\, LP\, and YAEL HALLAK with Discussant MICHELLE STEPHENS\, PhD
DESCRIPTION:DISTURBING THE SLEEP OF THE WORLD:  PSYCHOANALYSIS\, SOCIAL AWAKENING & RADICAL POLITICS\, the 2023-2024 Colloquium Series\nThe Colloquium Series 2023-2024 presented by the Psychoanalytic Society of the William Alanson White Institute\nDissociation\, Double Consciousness\, and Doublethink: Where Freud Meets W.E.B. DuBois and George Orwell\nCAROL GILLIGAN\, PhD\nNAOMI SNIDER\, LLM\, LP\nYAEL HALLAK\nDISCUSSANT: MICHELLE STEPHENS\,  PhD\n  \nABOUT TODAY’S TALK \n“…the splitting of consciousness which is so striking in the well-known classical cases under the form of “double conscience” is present to a rudimentary degree in every hysteria\, and that a tendency to such a dissociation\, and with it the emergence of abnormal states of consciousness (which we shall bring together under the term “hypnoid”) is the basic phenomenon of this neurosis” (Freud) \n“It is a peculiar sensation\, this double-consciousness\, this sense of always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others\, of measuring one’s soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity. One ever feels his two-ness\,—an American\, a Negro; two souls\, two thoughts\, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body\, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder.” (DuBois) \n“Doublethink means the power of holding two contradictory beliefs in one’s mind simultaneously\, and accepting both of them.”  (Orwell) \nThree key thinkers of the 20th century — the respective fathers’ of psychoanalysis; pan-Africanism and modern dystopian fiction — writing across a five decade time span\, happen upon the same discovery: the splitting of the conscious mind so that one can simultaneously know and not know. For one it is a psychic defense\, the other a symptom of anti-black racism and the third an instrument of the state that is used to maintain confusion. The same phenomenon looked at from three different angles\, when taken as a whole allows a new picture to emerge: the traumatic splitting of the mind as central to the maintenance of oppressive political systems. Bringing together the writing of Freud\, DuBois and Orwell\, Gilligan and Snider will sketch out an understanding of the psychological and social forces that inhibit and foster political resistance. With this understanding in mind\, the psychoanalytic project of expanding and integrating awareness becomes not just a matter of clinical process\, but political progress. \nLEARNING OBJECTIVES:\n1.     Attendees will be able to articulate the parallels between psychoanalytic theories of dissociation and Orwell’s concept of “Double think” and W.E.B. DuBois theory of “Double consciousness”\n2.     Attendees will integrate these concepts into a psycho-social theory of dissociation.\n\nABOUT CAROL GILLIGAN\, PhD\nCarol Gilligan is the author of In a Different Voice\, “the little book that started a revolution” and Why Does Patriarchy Persist? with Naomi Snider. As a member of the Harvard faculty\, she initiated the Harvard Project on Women’s Psychology and Girls’ Development and held the university’s first chair in Gender Studies. As a University Professor at NYU\, she started the Radical Listening Project. Her books include The Birth of Pleasure\, Meeting at the Crossroads (with Lyn Mikel Brown)\, Kyra: a novel\, Joining the Resistance\, Darkness Now Visible (with David Richards)\, and most recently\, In a Human Voice. In 1996 she was named by Time magazine as one of the 25 Most Influential Americans.\nABOUT NAOMI SNIDER\, LLM\, LP\nNaomi Snider is a practicing psychoanalyst and graduate of the William Alanson White Institute of Psychiatry\, Psychoanalysis & Psychology\, where she currently serves as President of the Psychoanalytic Society. Her published works include the 2018 book\, Why Does Patriarchy Persist?\, co-authored with Carol Gilligan\, and the co-edited volume (with Jean Petrucelli and Sarah Schoen)\, Patriarchy and its Discontent: Psychoanalytic Perspective (2022). She is currently part of a research team from NYU’s Radical Listening Project that in collaboration with three girls’ schools\, is taking up one of the most urgent challenges of girls’ education: how to help girls develop the skills they need to resist pressures to self-silence in the name of inclusion and success.\nABOUT YAEL HALLAK\nYael Hallak\, a social psychologist\, holds a postgraduate Advanced Cognitive Behavioral Therapy certification from NYU and is currently pursuing her studies in the Counseling for Mental Health and Wellness graduate program. Yael is a published author and contributor to Ha’aretz. Currently\, she is engaged in research examining the experiences of IDF spotters concerning the October 7 war\, particularly highlighting the voices of young women who endured profound personal costs for silencing themselves\, including the ultimate sacrifice—the loss of their lives.\nABOUT MICHELLE STEPHENS\, PhD\, LP\nMichelle Stephens is a graduate of the William Alanson White Institute of Psychiatry\, Psychoanalysis & Psychology and a practicing psychoanalyst. She is also Professor of English and Latino and Caribbean Studies at Rutgers University\, and the Founding and Executive Director of Rutgers’ Institute for the Study of Global Racial Justice (ISGRJ). Originally from Jamaica\, West Indies\, she graduated from Yale University with a PhD in American studies. She is the author of Black Empire: The Masculine Global Imaginary of Caribbean Intellectuals in the United States\, 1914 to 1962 (Duke University Press\, 2005) and Skin Acts: Race\, Psychoanalysis and The Black Male Performer (Duke University Press\, 2014). Recently she has published articles on the intersections of race and psychoanalysis in such journals as JAPA\, Contemporary Psychoanalysis\, Psychoanalytic Dialogues and Psychoanalytic Quarterly\, Studies in Gender and Sexuality\, and Psychoanalysis of Culture and Society.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/disturbing-the-sleep-of-the-world-psychoanalysis-social-awakening-radical-politics-9/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240508T203000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240508T220000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240507T141118Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240507T141118Z
UID:10000121-1715200200-1715205600@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:LGBTQ Study Group - David Goldenberg\, M.D.
DESCRIPTION:“Homophobia: A Symptom”  \n  \nWednesday\, May 8\, 2024 \n8:30 – 10:00 PM (EST) \n  \nDescription: The authors’ thesis is that the pervasive prejudices that are homophobia and/or misogyny should alert us to significant underlying pathology in development\, specifically in the resolution of ordinary or expectable developmentally normative narcissistic and relational wounds and conflicts. All gender development involves trauma. Structured forms of hatred—homophobia\, transphobia\, misogyny\, and the like–signify defenses against unresolved conflicts arising from trauma. We focus on two aspects of homophobia: (1) fear of one’s drive-based aggression projected into and seen as threats from a homosexual person\, and (2) symptoms of unresolved developmental conflicts that encompass competitive strivings; a maladaptive defense against feelings associated with helplessness resulting from unmet developmental needs. These needs involve the ‘seeing and being seen’ dynamic\, mirroring and parental reflection\, necessary for the development of a coherent and flexibly stable sense of self and identity regarding gender\, sexual attraction\, aggression\, and competition. \nDavid Goldenberg: is a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst in private practice in Manhattan. He is a graduate of the New York Psychoanalytic Society and Institute where he is on faculty. He is also on faculty at Weill Cornell Medical College where he teaches in the Brain and Behavior course and\, also at Payne Whitney\, where he supervises Psychiatry residents in psychodynamic psychotherapy. At NYPSI he has taught various courses and served as Director in the Psychodynamic Psychotherapy Program and has held multiple administrative and educational positions\, including co-teaching Freud’s Case Studies in the analytic training program. As an ongoing Adolescent Psychoanalysis Candidate\, David co-teaches the Theoretical and Technical Aspects of Child Analysis in the tri-Institutional child and adolescent analytic training program; and is co-chair of the Committee on Racial Consciousness and the Diversities. He is a member of the Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research where he teaches a segment on mid-20th century ego psychology. He has written several book reviews for the Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association; participated on panels on Psychoanalysis and the Digital Age; presented papers on digitally-mediated dating and intimacy. His latest publication is about homophobia and misogyny with a revision of psychodynamic theories of gender development. \nFor inquiries regarding The LGBTQ Study Group please contact co-chairs\, \n  \nEsin Egit: e.egit@wawhite.org \nWilla France: poetadmiral@earthlink.net
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/lgbtq-study-group-david-goldenberg-m-d/
CATEGORIES:Modern Layout,Public
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wawhite.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/LGBTQ-colors-lines.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240515T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240515T210000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240416T175614Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240416T175614Z
UID:10000120-1715801400-1715806800@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Child & Adolescent Psychotherapy Training Program In person Open House
DESCRIPTION:An Open House at the Institute with clinical presentation\,\nSecret\, Love and Protection – stories from a 9-year-old girl\nby Dan Liu\, LCSW\nWednesday evening\, May 15th from 7:30 – 9:00PM\n20 West 74th Street (between Central Park West & Columbus Avenue)\, New York City 10023\n  \nThis presentation follows the therapy of Ava\, a 9-year-old girl whose parents are going through a separation. Throughout the two years of treatment\, Ava created numerous stories around the theme of secrets\, with little figures. She and the therapist embarked on a journey to understand the possible hidden meanings behind the secrets.\nFaculty\, graduates and current students will be present to answer questions about the CAPTP training program. Light refreshments will be served.\n  \nABOUT THE PRESENTER\nDan Liu\, LCSW\, is currently in the second year of the Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy Training Program.  She is a graduate of the Institute’s Psychoanalytic Training  program and she is also faculty in its Intensive Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy Program.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/child-adolescent-psychotherapy-training-program-in-person-open-house-3/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240601T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240601T140000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240404T152715Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240729T153132Z
UID:10000116-1717243200-1717250400@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Julianne Appel-Opper\, Zeynep Catay\, Ruella Frank\, and Helena Vissing
DESCRIPTION:Julianne Appel-Opper\, Zeynep Catay\, PhD\, Ruella Frank\, PhD\, and Helena Vissing\, PsyD\nwith Moderators Doris Brothers\, PhD\, and Jon Sletvold\, PsyD\nHOW DOES EARLY DEVELOPMENT AFFECT THE EMBODIMENT OF THE CLINICAL ENCOUNTER?\n  \nSATURDAY\, JUNE 1ST \n12 Noon – 2:00 PM/Eastern Daylight Time\n  \nA multi-view discussion followed by audience interaction. Presented in collaboration with The Wilhelm Reich Center for the Study of Embodiment.\n2 CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDITS ARE AVAILABLE. For CE Credit information\, click here\n  \nABOUT THIS EVENT\nThere can be little doubt that babies communicate with their caregivers through body–to–body interactions. However\, there are many ways to understand how these early interactions affect the embodiment of the therapeutic exchange. Our speakers offer a variety of perspectives on the crucial importance of understanding the link between embodiment in early life and the treatment situation.\nThis event brings together clinicians who hold a variety of views on the subject. The four speakers will answer questions posed by our two Moderators\, who are also Co-Directors of the Wilhelm Reich Center for the Study of Embodiment. After engaging in dialogue together\, members of our online audience will be invited to join the discussion.\n  \nABOUT THE WILHELM REICH CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF EMBODIMENT\nInspired by the pioneering work of Wilhelm Reich and encouraged by the recent surge of interest in embodiment among clinicians\, co-Directors Drs. Doris Brothers and Jon Sletvold have founded the Center. With it\, they are introducing an online forum for dialogues about the ways in which embodiment affects the theory and practice of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy.\nA wide range of approaches to embodiment have emerged in the last two decades that have led them to believe that a “turn toward embodiment” is underway. In the interest of furthering this turn they are offering a format that differs from the usual at psychoanalytic meetings. Rather than featuring a paper presenting a specific theorist or clinician followed by discussions\, they intend that each event will center around a specific topic. Speakers from around the world\, each of whom employs a different perspective on embodiment\, will be invited to participate in a roundtable conversation of the topic. Afterward\, online participants will be encouraged to join the conversation.\nLearn more about The Wilhelm Reich Center for the Study of Embodiment\n  \nCOSTS\nProfessionals $45\nCandidates and Students $25\n\nABOUT THE SPEAKERS\nJulianne Appel-Opper is a psychologist\, psychotherapist\, supervisor and trainer with 35 years of clinical experience. She offers online therapy and supervision internationally from her private practice in Berlin. Her approach of ‘Relational Living Body Psychotherapy’ focuses on inter-bodily communication and ways of developing embodied interventions. She has developed and offered international training programs since 2005 and has presented her work in articles\, book chapters\, interviews\, invited seminars/webinars and lectures. Her publications include: English smiles\, Italian shoulders and a German therapist (International Body Psychotherapy Journal\, 2019)\, Relational Living Body Psychotherapy: From physical resonances to embodied interventions or experiments (USA Body Psychotherapy Journal\, 2010)\, and Two living bodies online\, which will be published in 2024. Julianne is an Editorial Board Member of the European Journal for Qualitative Research in Psychotherapy\, a founding member of IG-FEST\, International Gestalt Therapy Study Group on Field-Emergent Self and Therapy. Her website is: www.thelivingbody.net \n\nZeynep Catay\, PhD\, is a Clinical Psychologist in private practice in New York City working with adults and children. She is also a Dance/Movement Therapist and practitioner of somatic experiencing method. She was a faculty member at the Psychology Department of Istanbul Bilgi University between the years of 2005 and 2019. Dr. Catay is currently a part-time instructor and clinical supervisor at the Clinical Psychology PhD program of the New School for Social Research. She has been a visiting scholar at the Center for Attachment Research at the New School and is currently directing a study in collaboration with the Child Psychotherapy Process Research Lab at Istanbul Bilgi University on the therapist’s ability to coordinate nonverbal communication in child psychotherapy. Her current research and writing interests focus on nonverbal bodily dynamics and embodiment in psychotherapy and somatic countertransference. She is also a candidate at the NYU post-doctoral program for psychoanalysis. \n  \nRuella Frank\, PhD\, is Founder and Director of the Center for Somatic Studies\, faculty at the New York Institute for Gestalt Therapy\, adjunct faculty at Gestalt Institute of Toronto\, and guest faculty at Gestalt Associates for Psychotherapy. Ruella teaches throughout the United States\, Europe\, Eurasia\, Mexico\, South America and Canada. She is author of Body of Awareness: A Somatic and Developmental Approach to Psychotherapy\, (2001\, GestaltPress\, available in 4 languages)\, co-author of The First Year and the Rest of Your Life: Movement\, Development and Psychotherapeutic Change (2010\, Routledge Press\, available in 3 languages)\, and author of The Bodily Roots of Experience in Psychotherapy (2022\, Routledge Press\, available in 7 languages). Her video Introduction to Developmental Somatic Psychotherapy\, is available in three languages. www.somaticstudies.com \n  \nHelena Vissing\, PsyD\, is a Licensed Psychologist certified in Perinatal Mental Health (PMH-C) in private practice in California. She practices psychodynamic and trauma-informed somatic psychotherapy as a Somatic Experiencing Practitioner. Dr. Vissing is experienced as Adjunct faculty at several graduate institutions including Reiss-Davis Graduate School\, Antioch University\, and The Chicago School of Professional Psychology. She has published book chapters and articles on the topic of the psychology of motherhood. Her book on her somatic and psychodynamic model for the treatment of trauma in the Perinatal Period is titled\, Somatic Maternal Healing: Psychodynamic and Somatic Trauma Treatment for Perinatal Mental Health (Routledge). Dr. Vissing has trained at the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles and the Saturday Center for Psychotherapy. She also hosts the New Books in Psychoanalysis podcast and is on the editorial board of the International Journal of Body Psychotherapy. \n\nABOUT THE MODERATORS/CO-DIRECTORS OF THE WILHELM REICH CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF EMBODIMENT\nDoris Brothers\, PhD\, is a co-founder and faculty member of the Training and Research in Intersubjective Self Psychology Foundation (TRISP). She was co-editor with Roger Frie of Psychoanalysis\, Self and Context from 2015-2019 and is an associate editor of Psychoanalytic Inquiry. She serves on the council of the International Association of Psychoanalytic Self Psychology (IAPSP). Doris has published many journal articles and book chapters as well as four books. Her latest book\, written with Jon Sletvold is entitled A New Vision of Psychoanalytic Theory\, Practice and Supervision: TALKING BODIES. Her earlier books are: Toward a Psychology of Uncertainty: Trauma-Centered Psychoanalysis (2008)\, Falling Backwards: An Exploration of Trust and Self-Experience (1995)\, and with Richard Ulman\, The Shattered Self: A Psychoanalytic Study of Trauma (1988). She has presented her work internationally and leads supervision/study groups with Jon Sletvold. She sees patients in private practice in New York and Oslo. \nJon Sletvold\, PsyD\, is founding board director and faculty member of the Norwegian Character Analytic Institute. He has written articles and book chapters on embodiment in psychoanalytic theory\, practice\, and training. He is the editor of four books and the author of The Embodied Analyst: From Freud and Reich to Relationality\, which won the Gradiva Award in 2015.  In 2019 he wrote From Muscular Armor to Bodies in Dialogue with Per Harbitz. His latest book\, written with Doris Brothers is A New Vision of Psychoanalytic Theory\, Practice and Supervision: TALKING BODIES. Dr. Sletvold has presented his work internationally and co-leads online supervision/study groups on embodiment in Europe\, North America and China with Doris Brothers. He practices in Oslo and New York.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/julianne-appel-opper-zeynep-catay-ruella-frank-and-helena-vissing/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240606T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240606T150000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240516T200438Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240516T200438Z
UID:10000122-1717680600-1717686000@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Revolutionary Libido:  Andreas Embiricos\, Surrealist Poet and Psychoanalyst
DESCRIPTION:PRESENTED BY THE ARTIST STUDY GROUP OF THE PSYCHOTHERAPY SERVICE FOR PEOPLE IN THE ARTS\nTHURSDAY\, June 6th FROM 1:30-3:00PM/Eastern\nRevolutionary Libido:  Andreas Embiricos\, Surrealist Poet and Psychoanalyst\nwith Alexander Baron-Raiffe\, PhD\, LP\nAttend in person or online as follows:\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nIn person at the Institute\, 20 West 74th Street\, between CPW & Columbus Avenues\nOnline via Zoom at: https://wawhite.zoom.us/j/8180152948?pwd=cDkrUTlMSndQendyZzhnc054c0tpQT09\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nPlease RSVP to attend: fvdillon@gmail.com\n  \nABOUT THIS PRESENTATION AND ITS SPEAKER\n“I once more take the opportunity to express here my admiration and gratitude for André Breton and the other surrealists who\, after Sigmund Freud and the psychoanalysts\, have shed\, in our age\, the most illuminating light on the thick darkness that surrounds us. And so a new world opened up before me\, like a sudden bursting into bloom of inexhaustible miracles\, a world around me and in me that was unending and immeasurable\, a truly magic world to which surrealism has given us once and for all the right keys.” (A. Embiricos\, “Letter to Vivika” in Amour Amour\, København & Los Angeles: Green Integer\, 2003\, p. 20 )\nOur presenter\, Dr. Alexander Baron-Raiffe\, will describe the major challenges and satisfactions of translating the work of Andreas Embiricos (1901-1975)\, a unique figure in the history of both Psychoanalysis and Surrealism in Greece. Embiricos’ work as a psychoanalyst was inseparable from his artistic practice.  Embiricos was personally close to André Breton\, the founder of the Surrealist group\, whose belief he shared: that Surrealism had the potential to effect revolutionary change on both the individual and the societal levels by bringing unconscious material to the surface through contact with the surrealist work of art. Embiricos brought the Surrealist faith to his clinical work through his vision of psychoanalysis as a revolutionary practice. He believed that Freudian psychoanalysts could serve the role of “revolutionary trainer” by liberating repressed libido on the level of the individual patient; at scale\, this could affect transformational change at the societal level.\nJoin us for Dr. Baron-Raiffe’s reading of Embiricos’ poetry and his writings on psychoanalysis\, and a discussion of their clinical resonance in our current socio-political climate.\n  \nAlexander Baron-Raiffe\, PhD\, LP\, is a psychoanalyst in private practice in New York City.  He is an advanced candidate at the Contemporary Freudian Society.  He holds a doctorate in French Literature from Princeton University where he was also a fellow of the Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies.  He has held teaching positions at Princeton University\, Fordham University\, Sarah Lawrence College\, and The New School.\nFrances V. Dillon\, MSW and Eric Dammann\, PhD\, Co-Directors\,  Artist Study Group
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/revolutionary-libido-andreas-embiricos-surrealist-poet-and-psychoanalyst/
CATEGORIES:Legacy Layout,Members Events,Public
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240607T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240607T120000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240321T185000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240729T153051Z
UID:10000111-1717754400-1717761600@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Treating Chronic Somatic Pain: Integrating Psychoanalysis and Neuroscience
DESCRIPTION:with Frances Sommer Anderson\, PhD\, SEP\nA 6-session online mini-course on Friday mornings\, starting June 7th.\n12 CEs are available upon completion of this course.\nThis series presentation has been arranged by the Institute’s Conference Advisory Board through the special efforts of Dr. Jean Petrucelli.\nABOUT THE COURSE\nSomatic pain\, a private subjective experience\, lends itself readily to the psychoanalytic clinicians’ intervention. In this experiential and didactic course\, therapists will learn how to intervene effectively with people in chronic pain\, once a medical evaluation has ruled out structural and/or organic disease as the source.\nThrough discussions of contemporary research on the neuroscience of pain\, analysts will learn how to utilize knowledge about neural plasticity in their clinical work.  Clinical case material\, both published and from ongoing treatments\, will be used to illustrate how integration of Interpersonal/Relational principles with the neuroscience of pain encoding will expand the clinicians’ technical repertoire.\n  \nSERIES SCHEDULE\nClasses will be held online\, on Fridays\, from 10:00AM-12Noon/Eastern time\, on the following dates:\nJune 7\, 14\, 21\, 28 and July 12 & 19\n\nNotes about the Series:\nPreparation for Class 1 will begin with an assignment on May 17th\, emailed to students. Throughout the series\, Dr. Anderson will provide all readings and links to materials for each class on the Friday before the next Friday class.\nREQUIRED FOR THE COURSE:\nBreaking Out of Pain:  Living the Legacy of John E. Sarno\, MD   Leonard-Segal\, A.\, Sherman\, E.\, Feinblatt\, A\, and Anderson\, F. S. (2023) Atmosphere Press.\nNeuroplastic Transformation Workbook\, Moskowitz\, M. H.\, & Golden\, M. D. (2013). Available as an eBook on the website of Marla Golden:  https://www.integrativepain.com\n  \nTHE CLASSES:\nClass 1 FRIDAY\, JUNE 7:  Defining Somatic Pain as an Interpersonal/Relational Construction\nPreparation for Class 1 begins with an assignment on May 17\, 2024\nClass 2 FRIDAY\, JUNE 14: The Impact of Adverse Childhood Experiences on the Development of Chronic Pain: Early Psychodynamic Contributions\nClass 3 FRIDAY\, JUNE 21: The Contribution of John E. Sarno\, MD\nClass 4 FRIDAY\, JUNE 28: Further Elaborations of Sarno’s Contribution\nClass 5 FRIDAY\, JULY 12: The Neuroscience of Pain: Neuroplasticity\nClass 6 FRIDAY\, JULY 19: The Contributions of Physicians Influenced by John E. Sarno\, MD\n  \n  \nCOSTS\nPROFESSIONALS: Early Registration extended through May 17th\, $675\nStarting May 18th\, Professionals $775\nCANDIDATES & STUDENTS: Early Registration extended through May 17th\, $400\nStarting May 18th\, Candidates & Students $500\nNote: Refunds for the full amount of the series cost will be made for requests made by or before May 31st\, one week in advance of the series start date. \n\n  \nABOUT FRANCES SOMMER ANDERSON\, PhD\, SEP\n \nFrances Sommer Anderson\, PhD\, SEP\, a psychologist and psychoanalyst with advanced training in treating trauma\, has specialized in treating chronic somatic pain since 1979. She is recognized internationally for her contributions to the psychoanalytic literature on treating chronic pain\, expanding what she learned from John E. Sarno\, MD and Arlene Feinblatt\, PhD while working at Rusk Rehabilitation-NYU Langone Health.\nWith the late Lewis Aron\, she co-edited Relational Perspectives on the Body (1998)\, the ground-breaking volume credited with bringing the body into relational psychoanalytic theory and practice.  In 2008\, she edited Bodies in Treatment: The Unspoken Dimension\, and in 2013\, co-authored with Dr. Eric Sherman\, Pathways to Pain Relief\, also available in Spanish. She and Dr. Sherman teach courses on treating chronic pain for psychoanalysts. Breaking Out of Pain:  Living the Legacy of John E. Sarno\, MD\, published in December 2023\, was co-authored with Andrea Leonard-Segal\, MD\, Eric Sherman\, PsyD\, and Arlene Feinblatt\, PhD.\nDr. Anderson was the invited lecturer in 2015 at London’s 22nd John Bowlby Memorial Conference\, which honored the contributions of Dr. Sarno. Her paper\, It Was Not Safe to Feel Angry: Disrupted Early Attachment and the Development of Chronic Pain in Later Life\, was published in 2017. In 2016\, she was the only clinician invited to present clinical case material at the American Psychosomatic Society’s research conference\, Neuroscience of Pain: Early Life Adversity\, Mechanisms and Treatment. In collaboration with cognitive neuroscientists Richard D. Lane\, MD and Ryan Smith\, PhD\, she published a theoretical model to explain how physical pain can override emotional pain (2018).\nTo read more about Dr. Anderson\, visit: drfransommeranderson.com\nAlso:  pathwaystopainrelief.com  and breakingoutofpain.com
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/treating-chronic-somatic-pain-integrating-psychoanalysis-and-neuroscience/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240610T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240610T210000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240523T160559Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240606T151155Z
UID:10000123-1718047800-1718053200@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:The Child & Adolescent Psychotherapy Training Program   In Person Open House
DESCRIPTION:An Open House at the Institute with clinical presentation and supervision\nHow Mentalization Helps an Adolescent Learn About Love\, Anger and Growth\nby Mayan Abecasis\, LMSW\nwith Supervision by Jacqueline Ferraro\, DMH\nMonday\, June 10\, 2024\n7:30-9:00PM\n20 West 74th Street (between Central Park West & Columbus Avenue)\, New York City 10023\nThe evening’s case presentation is about an an 18-year-old patient who presented with issues of anger\, engaging in a series of risky behaviors during the last year of high school and first year of college.\nThrough mentalization of her relationships with her family\, partner\, as well as her therapist\, the patient explored her relationships. In re-enactments in therapy and using her countertransference\, the therapist supported the patient in learning to love herself and others\, and to look at her behavior patterns. Both patient and clinician grew from the relationship-evolving treatment.\nFaculty\, graduates and current students will answer questions about the CAPTP training program. Light refreshments will be served.\nMayan Abecasis\, LMSW\, is a second-year candidate in the Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy Training Program at the William Alanson White Institute. She graduated with a Masters of Social Work from Columbia University and attended an Internship at Creedmore Psychiatric Center where she worked with young adult psychiatric patients.  Since then\, she has worked at a school-based psychotherapy program in Western Queens providing therapy to students and families. At the William Alanson White Institute\, her first training in interpersonal/relational psychotherapy\, she is feeling inspired and  supported.\nJacqueline T. Ferraro\, DMH\, is Director of the Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy Training Program at the William Alanson White Institute (CAPTP).  She is faculty\, supervisor and Executive Committee member of the Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy Training Program (CAPTP) and also of the Eating Disorders and Addictions Program (EDCAS) at the Institute. Dr. Ferraro has years of experience working with adults\, adolescents\, children and families. She maintains a private practice on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/child-adolescent-psychotherapy-training-program-in-person-open-house-4/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240612T203000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240612T220000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240605T151529Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240605T151704Z
UID:10000125-1718224200-1718229600@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:LGBTQ Study Group - KATE BORNSTEIN
DESCRIPTION:Beyond Binaries: Navigating the Quantum Self \n  \nWednesday\, June\, 12 2024 \n8:30 – 10:00 PM (EST) \n  \n\n\n\nOn Zoom only. RSVP below  \nhttps://wawi.wufoo.com/forms/s1v361i7149pvzz/ \nPlease note that the LGBTQ Study Group events are not recorded.\n\n\n\nDescription: Dive deep into the complexities of gender with Kate Bornstein’s revolutionary talk. Explore gender not just as a binary but also as a multi-dimensional experience\, where biology meets the mind\, spirit\, and the very fabric of space-time. This presentation will challenge your perceptions\, expand your understanding\, and invite you to view gender identity through a radically inclusive lens. \nFor over thirty years\, Kate Bornstein has been writing about non-binary gender in theory\, fiction\, and memoir. Kate’s books include three classic texts of postmodern gender theory\, Gender Outlaw\, My New Gender Workbook\, and A Queer and Pleasant Danger. Her collected papers are archived and available for research at Brown University\, alongside the archived papers of Kate’s partner in life and art\, Barbara Carrellas \n\n\n\nPlease note: \n– The registrants will receive the Zoom link to attend this meeting via email from \nThe William Alanson White Institute with subject line: \n“LGBTQ Study Group 2023-2024”. \n– LGBTQ Study Group events are not recorded. \n– We are not able to provide CE credits at this time.\n\n\n\nFor inquiries regarding The LGBTQ Study Group please contact co-chairs \nEsin Egit: e.egit@wawhite.org \nWilla France: poetadmiral@earthlink.net
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/lgbtq-study-group-kate-bornstein/
CATEGORIES:Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240617T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240617T093000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240125T164717Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250107T212237Z
UID:10000106-1718616600-1718616600@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:The 2024 Summer Educational Intensive
DESCRIPTION:The 2024 Summer Educational Intensive: Master Clinicians of the Interpersonal Perspective\nMonday-Friday\, June 17th-21st\, 2024\n9:30AM-12:30PM daily\nWe are pleased to announce the return of the Institute’s unique annual program: The Summer Educational Intensive is being offered in person\, at the Institute\, in June\, 2024.\n  \nABOUT THE PROGRAM \nFive master clinicians offer their perspective on Interpersonal-Relational psychoanalysis from their area of expertise; they will illustrate technique and theory as applied to clinical material. This weeklong program offers three intensive hours each morning of clinical presentation\, live supervision and group discussion followed by a Q and A with the audience.\nAll classes are in person at the Institute.  A welcome breakfast and  introduction to the Institute will be part of the first morning’s schedule; coffee and light refreshments are available daily. Afternoons and evenings are free for students to explore New York City or for locals to return to their work settings.\n15 CEs are available for this program. For information about CE Credits click here.\nThe William Alanson White Institute is located at 20 West 74th Street between Central Park West and Columbus Avenue\, in the heart of Manhattan’s Upper West Side. The neighborhood includes Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts\, several museums\, as well as numerous restaurants and shops. It is also a great jumping-off point for visiting all other parts of the City.\n\n  \nTHE SCHEDULE\nMonday\, June 17th     Pascal Sauvayre\, PhD\nOn Not Knowing and Needing to Know\nCase Presenter: David Jiang\, MD\nDr. Sauvayre will explore the confrontation of the fundamental human drive to know with the unknowable object of psychoanalysis – the unconscious.  Dr. Sauvayre will explore this from the particular perspective of Interpersonal psychoanalysis and the interpersonal field.\n  \nTuesday\, June 18th       Jack Drescher\, MD\nA Bisexual Man’s Search for Identity: An Interpersonal Psychoanalytic Perspective\nCase Presenter: Sarah Best\, LCSW-R\nDr. Drescher offers detailed case material of a man in his 30s who was still questioning his sexual identity after a prior lengthy analysis.  In a uniquely Interpersonal style\, he explores and then shares with the patient his own associations to the analytic material.  Dr. Drescher uses the case to illustrate how the therapeutic task of defining a sexual identity is often a complex\, interpretative and interpersonal process.\n\nWednesday\, June 19th      Ira Moses\, PhD\nThe Role of Inquiry: A Workshop on “Detailed Listening”\nCase Presenter: Bevin Campbell\, PsyD\nDr. Moses examines the role of Inquiry in supplementing the therapeutic tools of empathy and interpretation as a way to assist patients in becoming active participants in instead of passive recipients of their psychodynamic treatment. This is also a workshop on “detailed listening” to find openings in the patient’s narrative that help them engage in introspection\, a particular challenge with once weekly patients. The use of Inquiry also maintains the  therapist’s curiosity about the patient.  As Sullivan cautioned\,  “(We) should never forget that conclusions about the subjective experience of the patient can only result in an inference\, never a fact”.\n\nThursday\, June 20th       Michelle Stephens\, LP\, PhD\nRace in Interpersonal Space\nCase Presenter: Stav Livne\nDr. Stephens explores and applies insights from key Interpersonal thinkers such as Harry Stack Sullivan and Philip Bromberg\, alongside the decolonial insights of Frantz Fanon\, to expand participants’ thinking about race in the clinical space.\n\nFriday\, June 21st        Jenny Kaufmann\, PhD\nUnderstanding the Developmental Force of Narcissism: Formative Trauma and Transference\nCase Presenter: Morteza Modares Gharavi\, PhD\nThe strength of the Interpersonal position is in helping narcissistic patients face the defensive and maladaptive aspects of their narcissism. Dr. Kaufmann supplements this Interpersonal emphasis with a background in Self Psychology/Self and Object Freudians that  underscores narcissism as reflecting a developmental force impacted  by formative trauma. She explores Steve Mitchell’s dialectic between narcissism as defense and narcissism as a developmental force. She also uses the work of Sheldon Bach to explore narcissistic transferences and mourn the effects of early relational trauma.\n\nSummer Educational Intensive: \nLearning Objective \n  \n Monday June 17: Pascal Sauvayre\, PhD \nTo  explore the confrontation of the fundamental human drive to know with the unknowable object of psychoanalysis – the unconscious.   \n  \nTuesday June 18th: Jack Drescher\, MD \nTo use case material to illustrate how the therapeutic task of defining a sexual identity is often a complex\, interpretative and interpersonal process. \n  \nWednesday June 19th : Ira Moses\, PhD \n  \nTo examine the role of Inquiry in supplementing the therapeutic tools of empathy and interpretation as a way to assist patients in becoming active participants in instead of passive recipients of their psychodynamic treatment.  \n  \nThursday June 20th Michelle Stephens\, LP\, PhD \n  \nTo explore and apply insights from key Interpersonal thinkers such as Harry Stack Sullivan and Philip Bromberg\, alongside the decolonial insights of Frantz Fanon\, to expand participants’ thinking about race in the clinical space \n  \nFriday June 21st: Jenny Kaufmann\, PhD \n  \nTo  explain Steve Mitchell’s dialectic between narcissism as defense and narcissism as a developmental force and use the work of Sheldon Bach to explore narcissistic transferences and mourn the effects of early relational trauma. \n\nCOSTS\nProfessionals – Regular pricing $700 starting May 21st.\nCandidates & students – Regular pricing $375 starting May 21st.\nNote: Refunds are given for requests made by Monday\, June 3rd\, two weeks prior to the course’s start date. From June 3rd and on\, medical documentation will be required. \n  \nABOUT THE CLINICIANS and their PRESENTERS\nPascal Sauvayre\, PhD\, is Faculty\, Training and Supervising Analyst at WAWI. He studies\, teaches\, and writes at the intersection of psychoanalysis and philosophy. Among his most recent projects are the Routledge books\, Culture\, Politics\, and Race in the Making of Interpersonal Psychoanalysis\, edited with Roger Frie\, and The Unconscious: Contemporary Refractions in Psychoanalysis\, edited with David Braucher. Dr. Sauvayre has a private practice in New York City.\nDavid Jiang\, MD\,  is a trilingual academic community psychiatrist at the Harlem Health Center of Mount Sinai and Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at the Icahn School of Medicine. In addition to working clinically with adults from a great diversity of backgrounds\, he is an enthusiastic lecturer and supervisor of psychiatry residents\, a presenter at national conferences\, and has published several papers in the psychiatric peer-reviewed literature. His teaching centers on trauma-informed care\, the neurobiology of trauma\, and facilitating deep change in psychoanalytic psychotherapy. He is in his sixth year of training as a candidate in psychoanalysis at the William Alanson White Institute.\n\n\nJack Drescher\, MD\, a Training and Supervising Analyst at the WAWI\, is a recipient of the 2022 Mary S. Sigourney Award for his international work on gender and sexuality.  He is a member of the faculties of the New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis\, the Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research and the Florida Psychoanalytic Center. He is also a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia. Dr. Drescher is a Director-at-Large of the American Psychoanalytic Association and the moderator of the Journal Club of the International Psychoanalytical Association. He is author of “Psychoanalytic Therapy and the Gay Man” (Routledge)\, and Emeritus Editor of the Journal of Gay and Lesbian Mental Health.\nTo learn more about Dr. Drescher go to: https://jackdreschermd.net/\nTo read about his 2022 Sigourney Award: https://www.sigourneyaward.org/newsandevents/2022/11/15/jack-dreschers-work-wins-the-sigourney-award-2022\nSarah Best\, LCSW-R\, PC\, is a psychotherapist specializing in reproductive mental health\, mixed-race mother/daughter dyads\, and the impact of childhood trauma on adult patients. In addition to maintaining a full-time private practice\, Sarah provides supervision in multiple group practices. She teaches master’s level social work and mental health counseling students at NYU\, where she earned her MSW as a merit scholar. She has completed intensive post-graduate training at the Beck Institute for Cognitive Behavior Therapy and the Ackerman Institute for the Family. Sarah began studying at WAWI in 2018\, completing both the online and in-person IPPP courses before completing the Adult Program in Psychoanalysis in May of 2024.\n\n\nIra Moses\, PhD\, ABPsa\, is a Training and Supervising Analyst\, Former Director of Training and Former Director of Clinical Services at WAWI.  He is on the faculty of the Western New England Psychoanalytic Institute and Visiting Faculty of the San Diego Psychoanalytic Center; former Board Member and Faculty of the China American Psychoanalytic Alliance; Faculty\, Intensive Psychodynamic Psychotherapy Program for Ukrainian speakers; and former member of the Board of Directors\,  American Psychoanalytic Association. Dr. Moses has published articles on the Misuse of Empathy; Anonymity and Self Disclosure; and the Analyst’s Resistance to Asking Questions. \nBevin Campbell\, PsyD\, is a New York and New Jersey licensed psychologist treating couples and individuals in her Brooklyn based psychotherapy practice.  Dr. Campbell has a postgraduate certificate in Couple Therapy from Adelphi University and is an advanced candidate at the William Alanson White Institute for Psychiatry\, Psychoanalysis\, and Psychology. She teaches in the graduate programs of NYU and Pace University and provides clinical supervision for graduate students at Pace.  Dr. Campbell is a consultant with The Academy for Community Behavioral Health\, a partnership between the Mayor’s Office of Community Mental Health and the CUNY School of Professional Studies\, where she designs and facilitates coursework on responding to grief and loss. \n\n\nMichelle Stephens\, LP\, PhD\, is a graduate of WAWI\, as well faculty and Supervisor of Psychotherapy there. She is also Professor of English and Latino and Caribbean Studies at Rutgers University\, where she served as the dean of the humanities in the School of Arts and Sciences from 2017-2020. She is the Founding and Executive Director of Rutgers’ Institute for the Study of Global Racial Justice (ISGRJ) where her signature initiative is “Black Bodies\, Black Health”\, a multi-pronged approach to incentivize engagement in interdisciplinary work in exploring structural racism in order to create equitable health outcomes. She is the author of Black Empire: The Masculine Global Imaginary of Caribbean Intellectuals in the United States\, 1914 to 1962 (Duke University Press\, 2005) and Skin Acts: Race\, Psychoanalysis and The Black Male Performer (Duke University Press\, 2014). She has published numerous articles on the intersections of race and psychoanalysis in JAPA\, Contemporary Psychoanalysis\, Psychoanalytic Dialogues\, Psychoanalytic Quarterly\, Studies in Gender and Sexuality\,  and Psychoanalysis of Culture and Society.\nTo learn more about Dr. Stephens’ work and the Rutgers Institute for the Study of Global Racial Justice\, go to: https://globalracialjustice.rutgers.edu/\nStav Livne\, currently lives in Brooklyn\, but she grew up in Israel and graduated from the Hebrew University with a Master’s degree in Child and Adolescent Clinical and School Psychology. Stav continued her training at the William Alanson White Institute and graduated from the Certificate Program in Psychoanalysis in 2023. Her interests are in intergenerational patterns of trauma and dissociation.\n\n\nJenny Kahn Kaufmann\, PhD\, is Director of Curriculum\, and is a Training and Supervising Analyst at WAWI where she teaches “Comparative Conceptualizations and Treatment Approaches in Working with Narcissistic Patients”. Dr. Kaufmann is also an Editorial Board member of the Institute’s journal\, Contemporary Psychoanalysis. She has co-written and presented numerous papers with Peter Kaufmann\, including Emerging from the Shadows of Parental Narcissism; We Have Met the Enemy and It is Us; and A Battle Cry for our Moment: Revisiting the Two Analyses of Mr. Z.\nMorteza Modares Gharavi\, PhD\, was born and raised in Iran where he earned his degree in Clinical Psychology in 2007 from the Iran University of Medical Sciences. After working as an associate professor\, he began training at the William Alanson White Institute online\, in 2019\, and then relocated to New York in 2021 while continuing his studies. Currently he is a fourth year Candidate in the Certificate Program for Psychoanalysis there\, and he also serves as a psychologist at the Pratt Institute. Dr. Gharavi’s interests focus on culture\, history\, and collective social traumas. He has been an active member of the Freudian Group of Tehran since 2010.\n 
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/the-2024-summer-educational-intensive/
CATEGORIES:Legacy Layout,Members Events,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240629T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240629T113000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240529T185849Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240729T153202Z
UID:10000124-1719655200-1719660600@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Sue Kolod and Tom Hennes on Crush of the Unseen: Engaging Toxic Polarization in Small Groups
DESCRIPTION:Crush of the Unseen: Engaging Toxic Polarization in Small Groups\nwith Sue Kolod\, PhD and Tom Hennes\nModerated by Mary McRae\, EdD\nHosted by Maria Nardone\, PhD\nPresented by The Technology and Global Learning Committee \nSATURDAY\, JUNE 29th\, 2024\n10:00-11:30AM/Eastern time\n1.5 CE Credits are available for attending this event.\nNOTE TO ALL REGISTRANTS FOR ONLINE EVENTS: We send out entry links for Zoom events 1-3 days prior to the scheduled event date. If you do not see a link-letter in your Inbox\, you should check your Trash and Spam folders. Still no link-letter the day before the event? Then email: e.rodman@wawhite.org \nWe will do whatever we can to get your link to you\, however the Institute is not responsible for your email provider’s security settings. There are no refunds for paid events if a link was sent to you.\n\n\nABOUT THIS EVENT\nToxic polarization is defined as a state of intense\, chronic polarization marked by high levels of loyalty to a person’s in-group and contempt or even hate for out-groups. Toxic polarization limits our ability to humanize and engage with political opponents.\nToxic polarization is occurring all over the world\, both within psychoanalysis and in the world at large. Fueled by social media\, the pandemic and authoritarian governments\, it has become a defining characteristic of our “zeitgeist.”\nIt has frequently been noted that psychoanalysis has much to offer to alleviate toxic polarization: We are trained to be good listeners\, to be able to hold different and sometimes opposing thoughts in our minds at the same time\, to listen to ourselves as we listen to others\, to pay attention to our reactions\, both conscious and unconscious and to forego judgement.\nBut this has not proven to be the case. Psychoanalysts\, in group settings\, are just as prone\, if not more so\, to splitting and projection as those in the general public. What is missing?\nThe presenters will outline their experiences working in small groups and describe the encounters and techniques that have worked as well as those that have not been successful in alleviating toxic polarization.\n\nABOUT THE SPEAKERS\nSue Kolod\, PhD\, is President-elect of the North American Psychoanalytic Confederation (NAPsaC).  She is a Supervising and Training Analyst and member of the Faculty at the William Alanson White Institute and co-leads a study group on polarization called the Depolarization Project.  Dr. Kolod is a Director-at-Large and serves on the Board of Directors of the American Psychoanalytic Association. In January 2024 Dr. Kolod was a presenter on a 2 part webinar on toxic polarization hosted by the International Psychoanalytic Association entitled\, Behind the Scenes of Toxic Polarization: Consequences of a Divided World\, Parts 1 & 2.\nDr. Kolod’s webinar presentations can be viewed through these two links:\nPart 1\, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kxt7bPc_5_c&t=155s\nPart 2\, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bc2UA2w8HA4&t=78s\n\nTom Hennes is one of the most sought-after exhibition designers in the world. He is founder of Thinc Design\, an internationally recognized\, award-winning exhibition design firm that has presented dynamic visitor experiences at museums and cultural attractions in numerous settings around the globe. Believing in the implicit power of the exhibition medium to engage society in important ways\, Mr. Hennes has pursued an ever-deepening involvement with exhibition projects embedded in social and environmental justice. At Thinc he has encouraged an evolving conception of relational design\, envisioning the exhibition as a narrative environment\, rich in implicit and explicit confluences\, contradictions\, and paradox. Mr. Hennes has written extensively on the multi-faceted role of museums and has taught at leading academic and design institutions\, including the Rhode Island School of Design\, the Pratt Institute in Boisbuchet\, France\, New York University’s Interactive Telecommunications Program\, the University of Pretoria\, among many others.\nRead about Thinc Design: https://www.thincdesign.com/\n\n\nABOUT THE MODERATOR & THE HOST\nMary B. McRae\, Ed.D\, today’s Moderator\, is a counseling psychologist in private practice who does individual and group psychotherapy.  She also does coaching and group facilitation to enhance more effective and productive  functioning. She is a retired professor of Applied Psychology\, New York University\,  where she taught for 27 years. Dr. McRae is the President of the William Alanson White Institute;  a fellow of the  A. K. Rice Institute for the Study of Social Systems and a member of the New York Center for the Study of Groups\, Organizations and Social Systems.\nMaria Nardone\, PhD\, the Host of this event and series\, is Faculty and Supervisor of Psychotherapy; Director of Technology and Global Learning; Former Director of the Online Interpersonal Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy Program for Russian Speakers; Former Chair\, Council of Fellows\, and Founding member of the Center for Public Mental Health at the William Alanson White Institute. Dr. Nardone is Co-Chair of American Psychoanalytic Association’s Social Issues Department and a North American Representative to the International Psychoanalytical Association’s Board of Directors. She is Adjunct Associate Professor in Fordham University’s graduate program in Healthcare Administration\, and former Adjunct Clinical Associate Professor\, Director of the Division of Psychological Services in the Department of OB/GYN at S.U.N.Y Downstate Medical Center. She is in private practice in New York City.\n  \nLearning Objectives of this presentation:\n\n\n\n\n1.      Participants will be able to define toxic polarization\n2.      Participants will begin to notice polarizing thoughts and feelings in themselves\n3.      Participants will be able to describe techniques that help alleviate polarization in small groups
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/sue-kolod-and-tom-hennes-on-crush-of-the-unseen-engaging-toxic-polarization-in-small-groups/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240905T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240905T150000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240725T164038Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240919T154615Z
UID:10000129-1725543000-1725548400@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Dreaming and Imagining: Space as Participant in Humanizing the Other
DESCRIPTION:PRESENTED BY THE ARTIST STUDY GROUP OF THE PSYCHOTHERAPY SERVICE FOR PEOPLE IN THE ARTS\nTHURSDAY\, SEPTEMBER 5th from 1:30-3:00PM\nTOM HENNES\, INTERNATIONALLY RENOWNED EXHIBITION DESIGNER\nDreaming and Imagining:   Space as Participant in Humanizing the Other\n  \nAttend in person or online as follows:\nIn person at the Institute\, 20 West 74th Street\, between CPW & Columbus AvenuesOnline via Zoom at: https://wawhite.zoom.us/j/8180152948?pwd=cDkrUTlMSndQendyZzhnc054c0tpQT09\nPlease RSVP to attend: fvdillon@gmail.com\n  \nABOUT THIS PRESENTATION AND ITS SPEAKER\n\nInternationally renowned exhibition designer Tom Hennes will present an exploration of how space shapes human experience and human relating. Showing slides of his projects\, he will share his singular approach of design from a relational perspective — both as a process of shaping\, and as the tangible result long after the space  is shaped.  Our group can consider the influences of what is probable and possible in any space: in our homes\, our consulting rooms\, our museums\, etc.  The question we are left with: Is it possible for some people to transcend their environment? \nPlease join us to examine and share your experience of the space around you.\nTom Hennes is one of the most sought after exhibition designers in the world. He is founder of Thinc Design\, an internationally recognized\, award-winning exhibition design firm that has presented dynamic visitor experiences at museums and cultural attractions in numerous settings around the globe. Believing in the implicit power of the exhibition medium to engage society in important ways\,  he has pursued an ever-deepening involvement with exhibition projects embedded in social and environmental justice;  Freedom Park in South Africa\, a national memorial and museum in Pretoria.  Hennes is in the midst of a 3-year consultation on human experience design in the planning of four new jails in the New York boroughs. \nAt Thinc\, Tom Hennes has encouraged an evolving conception of relational design\, envisioning the exhibition as a narrative environment\, rich in implicit and explicit confluences\, contradictions\, and paradox.  He has written extensively on the multi-faceted role of museums and has taught at leading academic and design institutions including the Rhode Island School of Design\, the Pratt Institute in Boisbuchet\, France\, New York University’s Interactive Telecommunications Program\, the University of Pretoria\, among many others.  \nTo read more about Thinc Design visit: https://www.thincdesign.com/\nFrances V. Dillon\, MSW and Eric Dammann\, PhD\, Co-Directors\,  Artist Study Group
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/dreaming-and-imagining-space-as-participant-in-humanizing-the-other/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240914T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240914T140000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240709T192247Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241023T154940Z
UID:10000126-1726272000-1726322400@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Can the Body Psychotherapies Integrate with Psychoanalysis?
DESCRIPTION:THE 2024-2025 EMBODIMENT SERIES\nScott Baum\, PhD\, ABPP; Caron Harrang\, LICSW\, FIPA\, BCPsa; Lynne Jacobs\, PhD; David Levit\, PhD\, ABPP\, SEP\nwith Moderators Doris Brothers\, PhD and Jon Sletvold\, PsyD\nCAN THE BODY PSYCHOTHERAPIES INTEGRATE WITH PSYCHOANALYSIS?\nSATURDAY\, SEPTEMBER 14th\n12 Noon – 2:00PM/Eastern Time\n\nThis series is presented in collaboration with The Wilhelm Reich Center for the Study of Embodiment.\n2 CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDITS ARE AVAILABLE. Instructions about how to obtain available CEs are sent out to registrants in the entry link email\, prior to the event. If you miss that letter (for late sign-ups)\, you should request CE instructions after the event.\nFor general CE Credit information\, click here\nNOTE TO ALL REGISTRANTS FOR ONLINE EVENTS: We send out entry links for Zoom events 1-3 days prior to the scheduled event date. If you do not see a link-letter in your Inbox\, you should check your Trash and Spam folders. Still no link-letter by the business day prior to the event?  Email: e.rodman@wawhite.org \nWe will do whatever we can to get your link to you\, however the Institute is not responsible for your email provider’s security settings. There are no refunds for paid events if a link was sent to you.\n\n\nABOUT THIS EVENT\nUntil recently\, there was little that the body psychotherapies and psychoanalysis had in common. In today’s changing world\, efforts have been made to combine the best of both these disciplines. The members of this conversation panel offer different and exciting approaches to this subject.\n\nABOUT THE WILHELM REICH CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF EMBODIMENT\nInspired by the pioneering work of Wilhelm Reich and encouraged by the recent surge of interest in embodiment among clinicians\, co-Directors Drs. Doris Brothers and Jon Sletvold have founded the Center. With it\, they are introducing an online forum for dialogues about the ways in which embodiment affects the theory and practice of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy.\nA wide range of approaches to embodiment have emerged in the last two decades that have led them to believe that a “turn toward embodiment” is underway. In the interest of furthering this turn they are offering a format that differs from the usual at psychoanalytic meetings. Rather than featuring a paper presenting a specific theorist or clinician followed by discussions\, they intend that each event will center around a specific topic. Speakers from around the world\, each of whom employs a different perspective on embodiment\, will be invited to participate in a roundtable conversation of the topic. Afterward\, online participants will be encouraged to join the conversation.\nLearn more about The Wilhelm Reich Center for the Study of Embodiment\n\nCOSTS\nProfessionals $50\nCandidates and Students $30\n  \nTHE SPEAKERS\nScott Baum\, PhD\, ABPP\, is a clinical psychologist and bioenergetic therapist practicing in New York City. Currently he is on the faculties of the New York\, Israel\, and Swiss bioenergetic societies\, and is an Adjunct Full Professor of Psychology in the PsyD program at Pace University. Dr. Baum has been involved in Reichian and related psychotherapeutic approaches since the 1960’s and has written extensively from a somatopsychic perspective about psychotherapy and related subjects.\n  \nCaron Harrang\, LICSW\, FIPA\, BCPsa\, is a board certified psychoanalyst with a full time private practice in Seattle\, Washington. She is an IPA training and supervising psychoanalyst with Northwestern Psychoanalytic Society and Institute. Selected publications include Painting Poppies: on the relationship between concrete and metaphorical thinking in A. Frosch (Ed.)\, Absolute Truth and Unbearable Psychic Pain (2012)\, Psychic skin and narcissistic rage: Reflections on Almodóvar’s The Skin I Live In. in the International Journal of Psychoanalysis (2012)\, From Reverie to Interpretation: Transforming Thought into the Action of Psychoanalysis\, D. Blue & C. Harrang (Eds.) (2016)\, River to rapids: Speaking to the body in terms the body can understand\, in C. Harrang\, D. Tillotson\, & N. Winters (Eds.)\, Body as Psychoanalytic Object: Clinical Applications from Winnicott to Bion and Beyond (2021)\, and Possibility Clouds Arising from a Close Reading of Civitarese and Berrini’s On Using Bion’s Concepts of Point\, Line\, and Linking in the Analysis of a 6- Year-Old Child (2022).\n  \nLynne Jacobs\, PhD\, has long been interested in the relational dimension of psychotherapy\, and in integrating humanistic theories with contemporary psychoanalytic theories. She is also interested in what it means to practice as a white therapist in culturally diverse environments. Both a gestalt therapist and a psychoanalyst\, she is a co-founder of PGI and faculty analyst at the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis (ICP) in Los Angeles. She teaches at ICP\, and teaches gestalt therapists locally\, nationally\, and internationally. She has published two books (with Rich Hycner) as well as numerous articles in both gestalt and psychoanalytic journals.\n  \nDavid Levit\, PhD\, ABPP\, SEP\, is a Diplomate in Psychoanalysis and in Clinical Psychology.  He is a Fellow at the American Board and Academy of Psychoanalysis and a Fellow at the American Academy of Clinical Psychology. He is a certified Somatic Experiencing Practitioner (SEP).  His current faculty positions are Faculty and Supervising Psychoanalyst at the  Massachusetts Institute for Psychoanalysis (MIP); co-founder\, Chair\, and faculty in the MIP Postgraduate Fellowship Program-West; and he is an instructor in psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.  He is former Associate Clinical Professor in Psychiatry at Tufts Medical School\, and is former Adjunct Associate Professor at the Smith College School for Social Work.  He has written about the interweaving of Somatic Experiencing into psychoanalytic treatment\, and has presented extensively on this subject regionally\, nationally and internationally.  He is in private practice in Amherst\, MA\, where he provides individual psychotherapy and psychoanalysis for adults and consultation for colleagues.\n  \nABOUT THE MODERATORS/CO-DIRECTORS OF THE WILHELM REICH CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF EMBODIMENT\n  \nDoris Brothers\, PhD\, is a co-founder and faculty member of the Training and Research in Intersubjective Self Psychology Foundation (TRISP). She was co-editor with Roger Frie of Psychoanalysis\, Self and Context from 2015-2019 and is an associate editor of Psychoanalytic Inquiry. She serves on the council of the International Association of Psychoanalytic Self Psychology (IAPSP). Doris has published many journal articles and book chapters as well as four books. Her latest book\, written with Jon Sletvold is entitled A New Vision of Psychoanalytic Theory\, Practice and Supervision: TALKING BODIES. Her earlier books are: Toward a Psychology of Uncertainty: Trauma-Centered Psychoanalysis (2008)\, Falling Backwards: An Exploration of Trust and Self-Experience (1995)\, and with Richard Ulman\, The Shattered Self: A Psychoanalytic Study of Trauma (1988). She has presented her work internationally and leads supervision/study groups with Jon Sletvold. She sees patients in private practice in New York and Oslo. \n  \n  \n \nJon Sletvold\, PsyD\,  is founding board director and faculty member of the  Norwegian Character Analytic Institute.He has written articles and book chapters on embodiment in psychoanalytic theory\, practice\, and training. He is the editor of four books and the author of The Embodied Analyst: From Freud and Reich to Relationality\, which won the Gradiva Award in 2015.  In 2019 he wrote From Muscular Armor to Bodies in Dialogue with Per Harbitz. His latest book\, written with Doris Brothers is A New Vision of Psychoanalytic Theory\, Practice and Supervision: TALKING BODIES. Dr. Sletvold has presented his work internationally and co-leads online supervision/study groups on embodiment in Europe\, North America and China with Doris Brothers. He practices in Oslo and New York.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/the-embodiment-series-can-the-body-psychotherapies-integrate-with-psychoanalysis/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240920T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240920T213000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240802T170456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250207T163032Z
UID:10000127-1726860600-1726867800@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Patricia Gherovici\, PhD\, The And/Or of Gender – a Psychoanalytic Perspective
DESCRIPTION:The Colloquium Series of 2024-2025\nPsychoanalytic Synthesis and Innovation in Times of Upheaval\npresented by the Psychoanalytic Society of the William Alanson White Institute\nOPENING EVENT\nPATRICIA GHEROVICI\, PhD\nThe And/Or of Gender – a Psychoanalytic Perspective\nModerated by TOM HENNES\nFRIDAY EVENING\, SEPTEMBER 20th\, 7:30-9:30pm\nPresented in person\, on location at the Institute\n20 West 74th Street (between Central Park West & Columbus Avenue)\nSeating for this and all Colloquium events are on a first come\, first serve basis.\nDoors will open for this event at 7:00PM.\n\nABOUT THIS PRESENTATION\nIn 1928\, Virginia Woolf wrote Orlando\, a novel in which the protagonist changes sex in the middle of the story. A century later\, writer and activist Paul B. Preciado sends a filmed letter to Virginia Woolf in Orlando\, My Political Biography (2023). Following the premise that the body is not a fixed entity but entails a process of embodiment\, a becoming-body\, this lecture takes as point of departure Preciado’s recent docu-fiction to explore how those analysands who exist beyond the so-called traditional gender norms as well as those who consider themselves non-binary or outside heterosexuality are helping us rethink gender. Thinking gender outside of the either/or of traditional binary opposition\, one subverts the fixity of identitarian claims while reorienting psychoanalytic practice.\n1.5 CE Credits are offered for this presentation. Attendees must sign the attendance sheet at the event in order to qualify for CE credit.\n\nABOUT THE SPEAKER\nPatricia Gherovici\, PhD\, is a psychoanalyst\, analytic supervisor\, and recipient of the 2020 Sigourney Award for her clinical and scholarly work with Latinx and gender variant communities.​ She is a trustee at Pulsion: The International Institute of Psychoanalysis and Psychoanalytic Psychosomatics.\nHer single-authored books include The Puerto Rican Syndrome (Gradiva Award and Boyer Prize)\, Please Select Your Gender: From the Invention of Hysteria to the Democratizing of Transgenderism\, and Transgender Psychoanalysis: A Lacanian Perspective on Sexual Difference. She co-authored with Chris Christian Psychoanalysis in the Barrios: Race\, Class\, and the Unconscious (Gradiva Award and the American Board and Academy of Psychoanalysis Book Prize.) She edited with Manya Steinkoler Lacan On Madness: Madness Yes You Can’t\, as well as Lacan\, Psychoanalysis and Comedy\, and most recently\, Psychoanalysis\, Gender and Sexualities: From Feminism to Trans* (Gradiva Award for Best Edited Collection).\n  \nABOUT THE MODERATOR\nTom Hennes is one of the most sought after exhibition designers in the world. He is founder of Thinc Design\, an internationally recognized\, award-winning exhibition design firm that has presented dynamic visitor experiences at museums and cultural attractions in numerous settings around the globe. Believing in the implicit power of the exhibition medium to engage society in important ways\,  he has pursued an ever-deepening involvement with exhibition projects embedded in social and environmental justice;  Freedom Park in South Africa\, a national memorial and museum in Pretoria.  Hennes is in the midst of a 3-year consultation on human experience design in the planning of four new jails in the New York boroughs.\nAt Thinc\, Tom Hennes has encouraged an evolving conception of relational design\, envisioning the exhibition as a narrative environment\, rich in implicit and explicit confluences\, contradictions\, and paradox.  He has written extensively on the multi-faceted role of museums and has taught at leading academic and design institutions including the Rhode Island School of Design\, the Pratt Institute in Boisbuchet\, France\, New York University’s Interactive Telecommunications Program\, the University of Pretoria\, among many others.\nTHIS EVENT’S LEARNING OBJECTIVES AND REFERENCES:\nLearning Objectives\n1) Explore the process of learning and unlearn about gender as it emerges in the clinical practice.\n\n\n2) Explain the difference between sex\, gender\, and sexual difference.\nReferences:\nGherovici\, Patricia (2023)\, “The Monsters within and the Monsters Without: Gender Dissidents and the Future of Psychoanalysis”\, Psychoanalytic Perspectives.\nGherovici\, Patricia (2022)\, “Beyond Fear and Pity”\, Psychoanalytic Review.\nGherovici\, Patricia (2021)\, “Does the Father Need to be a Man? Trans* Embodiments and Parenthood” in Weissberg\, Liliane Psychoanalysis\, Fatherhood\, and the Modern Family\, Palgrave\, Macmillan.\nGherovici\, Patricia\, and Steinkoler\, Manya (2023)\, “Introduction to Psychoanalysis\, Gender\, and Sexualities: From Feminism to Trans*”\, Routledge.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/patricia-gherovici-phd-the-and-or-of-gender-a-psychoanalytic-perspective/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241009T203000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241009T220000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20241007T183850Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241021T151112Z
UID:10000144-1728505800-1728511200@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:LGBTQ Study Group w/ JOY LADIN\, PHD
DESCRIPTION:The LGBTQ Study Group invites you to our first meeting of the new year to a conversation with poet Joy Ladin: \n  \nJOY LADIN\, PHD\n\n“Once Out of Nature:\nSelected Essays on the Transformation of Gender”\n\nWednesday\, October 9\, 2024\n8:30 – 10:00 PM (EST)\n  \n\n\n\n\non Zoom only\, RSVP below  \nhttps://wawi.wufoo.com/forms/s1v361i7149pvzz/\n\n\n\n\n  \nDescription: Join us to celebrate the publication of Joy Ladin’s Once Out of Nature: Selected Essays on the Transformation of Gender. The collection\, which includes essays that began as talks to our LGBTQ Study Group\, is a distillation of fifteen years of thinking\, writing and speaking about trans identities and issues. Ladin will read and discuss selections from the book\, focusing on contributions inspired by WAWI events. \n  \nJoy Ladin\, Ph.D.\, Joy Ladin has long worked at the tangled intersection of trans-gender identity and literature\, publishing and transgender identity\, publishing a memoir of gender transition\, National Jewish Book Award finalist Through the Door of Life\, a book-length work of trans theology\, Lambda Literary and Triangle Award finalist\, The Soul of the Stranger\, and her brand-new essay collection\, Once Out of Nature: Selected Essays on the Transformation of Gender (Once Out of Nature — Persea Books). She has also published eleven books of poetry\, including Family (also new – Family — Persea Books)\, including Lambda Literary finalists Transmigration and Impersonation and National Jewish Book Award winner The Book of Anna. Her work has been recognized with a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship\, a Fulbright Scholarship\, an American Council of Learned Societies Research Fellowship\, and a Hadassah Brandeis Institute Research Fellowship\, among other honors. A nationally recognized speaker on trans identity\, Ladin has been featured on a number of NPR programs\, including an “On Being” with Krista Tippett interview that has been re-broadcast several times. Her writing is available at joyladin.wordpress.com. \n\n\n\nPlease note: \n– The registrants will receive the Zoom link to attend this meeting via email from \nThe William Alanson White Institute with subject line: \n“LGBTQ Study Group 2024-2025”. \n– LGBTQ Study Group events are not recorded. \n– We are not able to provide CE credits at this time.\n\n\n\n  \nFor inquiries regarding The LGBTQ Study Group please contact the chair\, \n  \nWilla France: poetadmiral@earthlink.net
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/lgbtq-study-group-w-joy-ladin-phd/
CATEGORIES:Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241010T013000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241010T150000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240919T153704Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240925T190725Z
UID:10000141-1728523800-1728572400@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Resurrection: The Works of Heide Hatry and Francesca Schwartz
DESCRIPTION:PRESENTED BY THE ARTIST STUDY GROUP OF THE PSYCHOTHERAPY SERVICE FOR PEOPLE IN THE ARTS\nTHURSDAY\, OCTOBER 10th from 1:30-3:00PM\nRESURRECTION\nHeide Hatry and Francesca Schwartz\, Ph.D\nConceptual/Feminist Artists\n\nAttend in person or online as follows: \nIn person at the Institute\, 20 West 74th Street\, between CPW & Columbus Avenues \nOnline via Zoom at: https://wawhite.zoom.us/j/8180152948?pwd=cDkrUTlMSndQendyZzhnc054c0tpQT09 \nPlease be sure to RSVP to attend: fvdillon@gmail.com \n  \nABOUT THIS PRESENTATION\nVisual artists\, Heide Hatry and Francesca Schwartz derive their artistic center of gravity from a focus around the body and its embodiment of history\, memory\, containment\, and ultimate disappearance.  Though they work in different mediums\, (ash and bone\, etc.)\, there is a synergistic relationship and conversation between the two bodies of work.\nThe two are internationally known. For this Artist Study Group they will present a slide overview of their remarkable projects\, embracing a space between the body’s longing and loss\, memory and its erasure\, permanence\, and dissipation.\n  \nABOUT THE PRESENTERS\nHEIDE HATRY\nWith years of experience in the rare book trade\, Heide Hatry explores the mystery of bridging the flourishing of life in literature to the representation of the body’s decay created from the visceral ashes of her experience; from art object to art subject. Among her fundamental preoccupations are the effects of knowledge (and ignorance) upon perception.  Having been raised a Pietist in a Germany writhing under the onus of its ignominious past and on an industrialized pig-farm\, she is no stranger to the engagement with final things.\nFor additional information\, heidehatry.com\nFRANCESCA SCHWARTZ\nFrancesca Schwartz\, PhD\, merges psychoanalysis with her background in the performing and fine arts. She is informed by a fascination with the materiality and metaphor of the female body. Dr. Schwartz is on the faculty of IPTAR and has a private practice in New York where she specializes in treating emerging artists.\nTogether\,  their presentation and discussion will respond to the present wounds of the world in human ways:  awareness\, concern\, and involvement.  They will demonstrate the rigor and sensitivity of examining the relationship of memory\, of transformation. of reintegration\, and of art.  They use a range of unconventional artistic mediums in a desire to break entrenched social and gender identity roles.\nFor additional information\, francescaschwartz.com\n  \nFrances V. Dillon\, MSW and Eric Dammann\, PhD\, Co-Directors\,  Artist Study Group
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/resurrection-the-works-of-heide-hatry-and-francesca-schwartz/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241025T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241025T123000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240807T171726Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250207T165457Z
UID:10000138-1729854000-1729859400@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:DEPTH THERAPY IN A QUICK-FIX WORLD WITH LINDA MICHAELS\, PsyD\, MBA
DESCRIPTION:The PsiAN Series: Advocating for Our Patients\, Our Practice and Ourselves\nLINDA MICHAELS\, PsyD\, MBA\nDEPTH THERAPY IN A QUICK-FIX WORLD\nwith Moderator Bevin Campbell\, PsyD\nFriday\, October 25th from 11am-12:30PM/Eastern\nAN ONLINE WEBINAR\n1.5 CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDITS ARE AVAILABLE. Instructions about how to obtain available CEs are sent out to registrants in the entry link email\, prior to the event. If you miss that letter (for late sign-ups)\, you should request CE instructions after the event.\nFor general CE Credit information\, click here\nNOTE TO ALL REGISTRANTS FOR ONLINE EVENTS: We send out entry links for Zoom events 1-3 days prior to the scheduled event date. If you do not see a link-letter in your Inbox\, you should check your Trash and Spam folders. Still no link-letter by the business day prior to the event?  Email: e.rodman@wawhite.org  \nWe will do whatever we can to get your link to you\, however the Institute is not responsible for your email provider’s security settings. There are no refunds for paid events if a link was sent to you. \nNOTE: Confidentiality requirements prevent the recording of this presentation.\n\nCost: $30 per person\n\n\nABOUT THIS EVENT\nA presentation that will outline the forces and factors\, from within and without our field\, that are shaping the mental health landscape and contributing to the diminished understanding and appreciation of relational\, depth therapies. Misunderstandings among the public and policymakers about efficacy and “gold standard” treatments are common\, and new technology apps and companies are redefining what therapy is at scale. From the insurance industry\, to venture capital and private equity\, to the educational system training therapists and the fragmentation of our field\, there are many ways in which the work we do is threatened.\nThis presentation will outline factors that help therapists know what they can do to protect and advance their work. It will set the stage for the subsequent\, upcoming webinars in coming months.\n  \nABOUT THE PsiAN SERIES\nIn these last few years\, we have witnessed unprecedented upheaval in the areas of politics\, social justice\, the natural world\, and public health. Alongside these national and global challenges\, we are amid a mental health crisis with decreasing access to psychotherapy. It is vitally important in order for our practices and communities to thrive to be informed about how depth therapies can help\, what people are looking for in mental health treatment\, and how we can support and protect the work we do\, while making it more accessible to more people.\nPrevailing myths and misconceptions regarding mental health and psychotherapy that either clinicians or the public hold need to be challenged\, as they limit our capacity to help more people in more circumstances and often steer the public\, including marginalized communities\, towards a reduced set of options.\nMany of these areas are not addressed in undergraduate and graduate education\, and therapists often start practicing without a greater understanding and appreciation of these issues and the very real ways in which they can impact and impede our work.\nThis webinar series will help students and therapists at all career stages develop a greater understanding of the mental health landscape\, and how they can protect and advance the work they do.\nRead about the Psychotherapy Action Network (PsiAN) \n\nABOUT THE SPEAKER\n \nLinda Michaels\, PsyD\, MBA\, is a psychologist with a private practice in Chicago. She is Chair and Co-Founder of the Psychotherapy Action Network (PsiAN)\, a grassroots nonprofit that advocates for therapies of depth\, insight and relationship. She is a Consulting Editor of Psychoanalytic Inquiry\, Clinical Associate Faculty at the Chicago Center for Psychoanalysis\, and a fellow of the Lauder Institute Global MBA program. She is author and co-editor of Advancing Psychotherapy for the Next Generation\, and has published\, presented\, and been interviewed by The New York Times\, The Wall Street Journal\, NPR and other national media on the value of psychotherapy\, the therapeutic relationship and technology\, and the public narrative about therapy. Linda has a former career in business\, with over 15 years’ experience consulting to organizations in the US and Latin America.\n  \nABOUT THE MODERATOR\nBevin Campbell\, PsyD\, is a New York and New Jersey licensed psychologist treating couples and individuals in her Brooklyn-based psychotherapy practice. Dr. Campbell has a postgraduate certificate in Couple Therapy from Adelphi University and is an advanced candidate at the William Alanson White Institute. She is a teaching and supervising faculty member of the Health Psychology and School/Clinical Psychology programs at Pace university. She is a longtime PsiAN member and is the creator and host of PsiAN Speaks Live\, a quarterly forum on issues impacting contemporary mental healthcare.\n  \n  \n  \nLEARNING OBJECTIVES FOR THIS EVENT\n1)    Describe the impacts of new technology companies and venture capital investment entering the mental health field\n2)    Describe how stakeholders\, such as insurers\, policymakers\, and the mental health professions\, have influenced evidence-based treatments and public opinion on therapy
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/depth-therapy-in-a-quick-fix-world/
CATEGORIES:Legacy Layout,Members Events,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241101T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241101T213000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240801T163647Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250210T182714Z
UID:10000131-1730489400-1730496600@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Daniel Pick\, PhD\, Paranoid States: Reflections on Psychoanalytic Thought\, Conspiracy Theory\, and Political Life
DESCRIPTION:The Colloquium Series of 2024-2025\nPsychoanalytic Synthesis and Innovation in Times of Upheaval\npresented by the Psychoanalytic Society of the William Alanson White Institute\nDANIEL PICK\, PhD\nPARANOID STATES: Reflections on Psychoanalytic Thought\, Conspiracy Theory\, and Political Life\nwith Moderator David Thurn\, PhD\, LCSW-R\nFRIDAY EVENING\, NOVEMBER 1st\, 7:30-9:30pm\nPresented in person\, on location at the Institute\n20 West 74th Street (between Central Park West & Columbus Avenue)\nSeating for this and all Colloquium events are on a first come\, first serve basis.\n  \nABOUT THIS PRESENTATION\nIt is a truism to say that today we live in a world of ultra-suspicion. But what is the appeal of that world? How has it arisen and where are we heading now? Why is every major news story shadowed by myriad conspiracy theories as well as claims and counter-claims about mass brainwashing?  In addressing these issues\, Daniel Pick’s will revisit classic psychoanalytic ideas about paranoia\, alongside famous historical works\, case studies and works of cinema. He will ask how far past theories and stories may help us make sense of the dark times we are living in now.\n1.5 CEs are available for attending this presentation. Prior to the event an email is sent out with specific instructions about how to request your credits. To receive credit\, you must sign in at the event to confirm your attendance. (Late registrants should request instructions on the first business day after the event.) \n\nABOUT THE SPEAKER\nDaniel Pick\, PhD\, is a psychoanalyst and historian\, and recipient of the 2023 Sigourney Award. He was educated at Cambridge\, and taught for many years at London University. He is a training and supervising analyst at the British Psychoanalytical Society\, and professor emeritus at Birkbeck\, University of London. His books include Faces of Degeneration: A European Disorder\, c. 1848-1918; War Machine: The Rationalization of Slaughter in the Modern Age; Svengali’s Web: he Alien Enchanter in Modern Culture; The Pursuit of the Nazi Mind; Psychoanalysis: A Very Short Introduction; and most recently\, Brainwashed: A New History of Thought Control. 2014-21\, From 2014 to 2021\, he ran a team-based project\, on behalf of the Wellcome Trust\, focusing on the history of hidden persuasion and brainwashing.\nABOUT THE MODERATOR\nDavid Thurn\, PhD\, LCSW\,  is a psychoanalyst in private practice in New York and in New Jersey. He is a graduate of the William Alanson White Institute\, where he taught the Freud course for many years\, as well as a course on psychoanalysis and literature. A former academic\, David has also taught at Cornell\, Vassar\, and Princeton on a wide range of courses in literature\, and courses addressing literature in interdisciplinary contexts.\n  \nEvent Learning Objectives\n\n\nTo explain key psychoanalytic ideas about paranoid states of mind\, as developed by Freud\, Klein and others.\n\n\nTo discuss about the history of endeavors to apply those psychoanalytic ideas to cultural\, social and political phenomena\, past and present.\n\n\nTo consider the opportunities and potential difficulties of applied psychoanalytic thought in historical inquiries.\n\n\nTo investigate how historians and cultural theorists have developed their ideas about the paranoid style’ in political thought\, and to compare and contrast past and present analyses of the popular appeal and political exploitation of conspiracy theory.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/daniel-pick-phd-paranoid-states-reflections-on-psychoanalytic-thought-conspiracy-theory-and-political-life/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241106T203000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241106T220000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20241021T151035Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241021T151211Z
UID:10000146-1730925000-1730930400@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:LGBTQ Study Group w/ JACK DRESCHER\, M.D.
DESCRIPTION:LGBTQ STUDY GROUP of the William Alanson White Institute invites you to a conversation with \nJACK DRESCHER\, M.D. \n  \nAffirming Gender Dysphoric Youth: \nReflections on the Opposition \n  \nWednesday\, November 6\, 2024 \n8:30 – 10:00 PM (EST) \n\n\n\n\non Zoom only\, RSVP below  \nhttps://wawi.wufoo.com/forms/s1v361i7149pvzz/\n\n\n\n\nDescription: The treatment of children and adolescents diagnosed with Gender Dysphoria (DSM-5-TR) or Gender Incongruence (ICD-11) has evoked both clinical and cultural controversies. This presentation begins with a brief history of gender diagnoses in the DSM and ICD followed by a history of clinical controversies in treating prepubescent gender dysphoric children. The paper then goes on to explore some attitudes and beliefs that underlie opposition to gender affirming care followed by ways in which the data on treating these patient populations is sometimes misinterpreted or even deliberately distorted. The paper concludes with an ethical issue raised by such attitudes\, beliefs and practices. \nJack Drescher\, M.D.\,is a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst in private practice in New York City. \nDr. Drescher trained at the William Alanson White Psychoanalytic Institute where he is a Training and Supervising Analyst and serves as a member of its Board of Trustees. He is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia Uni-versity and a Faculty Member at Columbia’s Division of Gender\, Sexuality\, and Health. He is a Senior Psychoanalytic Consultant at Columbia’s Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research and Adjunct Professor at New York University’s Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis. \nDr. Drescher is a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association\, Past President of the Group for Advancement of Psychiatry and a Past President of APA’s New York County Psychiatric Society. He serves on APA’s Committee on Judicial Action. \nDr. Drescher served as Section Editor of the Gender Dysphoria Chapter in the DSM-5 Text Revision (DSM-5-TR) process. He served on APA’s DSM-5 Workgroup on Sexual and Gender Identity Disorders and served on the World Health Organization’s Working Group on the Classification of Sexual Disorders and Sexual Health that revised sex and gender diagnoses in the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11). He served on the Honorary Scientific Committee revising the 2nd edition of the Psychodynamic Diagnostic Manual (PDM-2). \nDr. Drescher’s professional honors include: \n\nDr. Ivan Goldberg Outstanding Service Award\, New York County Psychiatric Society (2024)\nHaskell Norman Prize for Excellence in Psychoanalysis\, San Francisco Center for Psychoanalysis (2023)\nThe Mary S. Sigourney Award for International Work on Gender and Sexuality (2022)\nVisiting Professor\, Michigan Psychoanalytic Institute (2021)\nAmerican Psychiatric Association’s John Fryer Award (2018)\n\nDr. Drescher is Author of Psychoanalytic Therapy and the Gay Man (Routledge) and Emeritus Editor of the Journal of Gay and Lesbian Mental Health. He has edited and co-edited more than a score of books dealing with gender\, sexuality and the health and mental health of LGBTQ communities. He has authored and co-authored numerous professional articles and book chapters as well. His publications have been translated into Italian\, Portuguese\, French\, Spanish\, Russian\, Arabic\, Finnish and German. \nDr. Drescher is an expert media spokesperson on issues related to gender and sexuality. \n\n\n\nPlease note: \n– The registrants will receive the Zoom link to attend this meeting via email from \nThe William Alanson White Institute with subject line: \n“LGBTQ Study Group 2024-2025”. \n– LGBTQ Study Group events are not recorded. \n– We are not able to provide CE credits at this time.\n\n\n\nFor inquiries regarding The LGBTQ Study Group please contact the chair\, \nWilla N. France: poetadmiral@earthlink.net \n 
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/lgbtq-study-group-w-jack-drescher-m-d/
CATEGORIES:Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241107T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241107T150000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20241016T192742Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241016T192947Z
UID:10000145-1730986200-1730991600@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:HUMANISM IN FROMM AND SHAKESPEARE WITH SANDRA BUECHLER\, PhD
DESCRIPTION:PRESENTED BY THE ARTIST STUDY GROUP OF THE PSYCHOTHERAPY SERVICE FOR PEOPLE IN THE ARTS\nTHURSDAY\, NOVEMBER 7th from 1:30-3:00PM/Eastern\nHumanism in Fromm and Shakespeare\nwith Sandra Buechler\, PhD\nAttend in person or online as follows:\nIn person at the Institute\, 20 West 74th Street\, between CPW & Columbus Avenues\nOnline via Zoom at:\nhttps://wawhite.zoom.us/j/8180152948?pwd=cDkrUTlMSndQendyZzhnc054c0tpQT09\nPlease be sure to RSVP to attend: fvdillon@gmail.com\n  \nABOUT THIS PRESENTATION\nDr. Buechler will consider some humanistic concepts in Erich Fromm’s work and in the plays of William Shakespeare. By juxtaposing their lines\, she hopes to convey the timelessness of both\, suggesting that Fromm’s insights gain vividness in Shakespeare’s neighborhood\, and Shakespeare’s lines sharpen from being beside Fromm’s formulations. More specifically\, in juxtaposing Fromm’s words about life with Shakespeare’s similar expressions\, she suggests that some insights are for all time\, spanning eras and geography: they are human.\n\nABOUT OUR PRESENTER\nSandra Buechler\, PhD\, is a Training and Supervising Analyst at the William Alanson White Institute.  Her many books include Making a Difference in Patients’ Lives (2008)\, which won the Gradiva award;  Still Practicing: The Heartaches and Joy of a Clinical Career (2012); Understanding and Treating Patients in Clinical Psychoanalysis: Lessons from Literature (2015); and Psychoanalytic Approaches to Problems in Living\, (Routledge\, 2019).  Her most recent bookis Erich Fromm:  A Contemporary Introduction (Routledge\, 2025).\n\nJoin us for this special guest and her presentation and discussion of universal and timeless themes.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nFrances V. Dillon\, MSW and Eric Dammann\, PhD\, are Co-Directors of the Artist Study Group
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/humanism-in-fromm-and-shakespeare-with-sandra-buechler-phd/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wawhite.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Slide1.jpeg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241204T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241204T220000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240724T163832Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250210T183822Z
UID:10000136-1733342400-1733349600@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Joshua Durban\, FIPA\, Revisited: Home\, Homelessness\, and Nowhere-ness in Early Infancy - Part 1 of 2*
DESCRIPTION:The Colloquium Series of 2024-2025\nPsychoanalytic Synthesis and Innovation in Times of Upheaval\npresented by the Psychoanalytic Society of the William Alanson White Institute\nJOSHUA DURBAN\, FIPA\nREVISITED: HOME\, HOMELESSNESS\, AND NOWHERE-NESS IN EARLY INFANCY  (Part 1)\nwith Moderator Tammy Kaminer\, PhD\nWEDNESDAY\, DECEMBER 4th\, 8:00-10:00PM\n*This is Part 1 of a two part event\nSeating for this and all Colloquium events are on a first come\, first serve basis.\n\nABOUT THIS PRESENTATION\nThe construction of a sense of home in early infancy is a complex achievement. It is intertwined throughout life with the child’s pursuit of a safe physio-mental coverage. This process will be described as an interaction between: (a) a safe dwelling in the body-as-mother (constitution); (b) the internalization of the mother-as-me (internal object space); and (c) the establishment of Oedipal triangular space\, which is responsible for the capacity to move between narcissism-as-a-home and the world-as-a-home.\nThe construction of a home as an interplay between these two elements is accompanied by distinct anxieties and unconscious fantasies. Disruption in the early process due to deficit\, internal object relations\, or environmental factors\, might lead to severe withdrawal\, mindlessness\, hatred\, violence\, and murderousness. A distinction will be made between these mental states of being-at-home\, homelessness\, and nowhere-ness based on the corresponding levels of early developmental and typical anxieties.\nHome and homelessness are seen as more developed states of object relating accompanied by some capacity for depressive feelings of loss\, mourning\, and longing. Nowhere-ness\, however\, stems from early states of anxiety-of-being and osmotic/diffuse anxieties\, which are characterised by confusion between self and object\, by a lack of orientation and of a sense of agency\, as well as by nameless grief\, nameless dread\, and devastation. The varieties of home\, homelessness\, and nowhere-ness will be discussed along with clinical material from the analytic treatment of a refugee child on the autistic spectrum and of his father. The role of psychoanalysis and of the psychoanalyst in promoting the creation of an internal home will be described in reference to technique.\n1.5 CEs are available for attending this presentation. \n\nABOUT THE SPEAKER\nJoshua Durban\, FIPA\, is training and supervising child and adult psychoanalyst at the Israeli Psychoanalytic Society and Institute in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv (IPA); and a research analyst and instructor at the Psychoanalytic Center of California (PCC) in Los Angeles. He is the founder and the clinical director of the Vista Autism Center (VAC) at the Vista Del Mar Child and Family Services (VDM) in Los Angeles\, which provides psychoanalytic treatment for infants\, toddlers\, adolescents and young adults on the autism spectrum and their families. He is on the faculty of the School of Medicine\, Tel-Aviv University\, The Psychotherapy Program\, Post-Graduate Kleinian Studies and the Early Mental States track. He is the editor (together with Dr. Merav Roth) of the Hebrew edition of the collected works of Melanie Klein. He is a member of the IJPA international editorial board and of the IPA inter-committee for the prevention of child abuse. He has a private practice in Tel-Aviv and Los Angeles and specializes in the psychoanalysis of ASD and psychotic children\, adolescents and adults. He is currently also teaching and supervising in the UK\, Germany\, Australia and the USA. His research on autism\, trauma and early development has been published and translated internationally.\nABOUT THE MODERATOR\nTammy Kaminer\, PhD\, is a clinical psychologist with 30 years of experience in the treatment of children and adolescents\, parents\, couples\, and families. Dr. Kaminer is a graduate of the William Alanson White Institute’s Child and Adolescent training program\, and part of the program’s faculty. Her previous experience includes providing psychotherapy\, neuropsychological testing\, and supervision in school and hospital settings. Dr. Kaminer is in full-time private practice in New York City.\n  \nEVENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES:\n\n\nDiscuss the origins of a sense of home in early infancy\n\n\nName two types of anxieties characteristic of neurodiverse infants\n\n\nDescribe the dynamics of early infantile trauma\n\n\nDemonstrate clinical work with post-traumatic autistic withdrawal
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/joshua-durban-phd-home-homelessness-and-nowhere-ness-in-early-infancy-part-1-of-2/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241205T114500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241205T134500
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240625T163944Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250210T183712Z
UID:10000137-1733399100-1733406300@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Joshua Durban\, FIPA\, Supervised Clinical Presentation - Part 2 of 2*
DESCRIPTION:The Colloquium Series of 2024-2025\nPsychoanalytic Synthesis and Innovation in Times of Upheaval\npresented by the Psychoanalytic Society of the William Alanson White Institute\n\nJOSHUA DURBAN\, FIPA\nSupervised Clinical Presentation\nTHURSDAY\, DECEMBER 5th\, 11:45AM-1:00PM\n*This is Part 2 of a two-part event\n\nABOUT TODAY’S PRESENTATION\nA case will be discussed with a focus on new diagnostical and technical considerations gained from working with neurodiverse infants and adults. Dr. Tammy Kaminer will present and Dr. Durbam will supervise.\n1.25 CEs are available for attending this event. \nABOUT TODAY’S SUPERVISOR\nJoshua Durban\, FIPA\, is training and supervising child and adult psychoanalyst at the Israeli Psychoanalytic Society and Institute in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv (IPA); and a research analyst and instructor at the Psychoanalytic Center of California (PCC) in Los Angeles. He is the founder and the clinical director of the Vista Autism Center (VAC) at the Vista Del Mar Child and Family Services (VDM) in Los Angeles\, which provides psychoanalytic treatment for infants\, toddlers\, adolescents and young adults on the autism spectrum and their families. He is on the faculty of the School of Medicine\, Tel-Aviv University\, The Psychotherapy Program\, Post-Graduate Kleinian Studies and the Early Mental States track. He is the editor (together with Dr. Merav Roth) of the Hebrew edition of the collected works of Melanie Klein. He is a member of the IJPA international editorial board and of the IPA inter-committee for the prevention of child abuse. He has a private practice in Tel-Aviv and Los Angeles and specializes in the psychoanalysis of ASD and psychotic children\, adolescents and adults. He is currently also teaching and supervising in the UK\, Germany\, Australia and the USA. His research on autism\, trauma and early development has been published and translated internationally.\n\nABOUT TODAY’S CASE PRESENTER\nTammy Kaminer\, PhD\, is a clinical psychologist with 30 years of experience in the treatment of children and adolescents\, parents\, couples\, and families. Dr. Kaminer is a graduate of the William Alanson White Institute’s Child and Adolescent training program\, and part of the program’s faculty. Her previous experience includes providing psychotherapy\, neuropsychological testing\, and supervision in school and hospital settings. Dr. Kaminer is in full-time private practice in New York City.\n  \nEVENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES:\n\nDiscuss the origins of a sense of home in early infancy\nName two types of anxieties characteristic of neurodiverse infants\nDescribe the dynamics of early infantile trauma\nDemonstrate clinical work with post-traumatic autistic withdrawal
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/joshua-durban-phd-supervised-clinical-presentation-part-2-of-2/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wawhite.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/16x9-9-01-24-No-Text-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241205T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241205T150000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20241126T184422Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241126T184527Z
UID:10000149-1733405400-1733410800@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:REVERSOS with Dr. Ernesto Mujica
DESCRIPTION:PRESENTED BY THE ARTIST STUDY GROUP OF THE PSYCHOTHERAPY SERVICE FOR PEOPLE IN THE ARTS \nTHURSDAY\, December 5th\, 2024 from 1:30-3:00PM/Eastern\nREVERSOS\nWITH ERNESTO MUJICA\, PhD\n  \nAttend in person or online as follows:\nIn person at the Institute\, 20 West 74th Street\, between CPW & Columbus Avenues\nOnline via Zoom at: https://wawhite.zoom.us/j/8180152948?pwd=cDkrUTlMSndQendyZzhnc054c0tpQT09\nPlease be sure to RSVP to attend: fvdillon@gmail.com\n  \nABOUT THIS PRESENTATION\nDr. Ernesto Mujica was inspired to share his experience following a visit in February 2024 to the Museo del Prado and seeing the exhibit\, “Reversos”.  According to him\, “There were two very unique aspects to this exhibit: one being that the curator is an artist himself – rather than an art historian – as would most typically be for an exhibit of this nature. The curator\, Miguel Angel Blanco\, noted that the museum had provided him with the “poetic license for subjectivity and imagination” to be an integral part of this project. The second unique feature was the focus on an exploration of the reverse side of paintings.”\nDr. Mujica was struck by the kindred spirit between the project of “Reversos” and our work as psychoanalysts\, a project entrenched in curiosity and fascination with the relationship between what is portrayed and what is hidden\, what is initially offered as ‘real’ and what has led to its creation\, its context and its history. Some of the topics to be discussed in his presentation concern the self-portrait of the artist as it is revealed by the back side of a painting and the ‘unseen’ as a ﬁeld for experimentation and subjective expression.   Clinical vignettes will be discussed which highlight contrasts between how the therapist initially perceives and imagines the patient and what is consequently revealed.\n  \nABOUT THE SPEAKER\nErnesto Mujica\, PhD\, is Director of the Sexual Abuse Study Group and Service at WAWI\, where he also serves as an Associate Editor of the institute’s journal\, Contemporary Psychoanalysis.  Dr. Mujica is a supervisor of psychotherapy at WAWI\, and at the doctoral program in Clinical Psychology of Teachers College\, Columbia University. He integrates his clinical work in the areas of childhood and adult trauma\, as well as sociocultural factors in mental health\, with his strong interest in the arts.  His previous talks within the WAWI Artists Study Group have included discussions of artists El Anatsui (Ghana & Nigeria)\, Kent Monkman (First Nations-Cree\, Canada)\, and Yayoi Kusama (Japan).\n  \nFrances V. Dillon\, MSW\, and Eric Dammann\, PhD\, are Co-Directors of the  Artist Study Group.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/reversos-with-dr-ernesto-mujica/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241206T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241206T123000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240807T171706Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241031T152533Z
UID:10000139-1733482800-1733488200@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:WHO IS DEPTH THERAPY SUITED FOR? Challenging the Myths and Stereotypes
DESCRIPTION:The PsiAN Series: Advocating for Our Patients\, Our Practice and Ourselves\nUSHA TUMMALA-NARRA\, PhD\nWHO IS DEPTH THERAPY SUITED FOR? CHALLENGING THE MYTHS AND STEREOTYPES\nwith Moderator Bevin Campbell\, PsyD\nFriday\, December 6th\, 2024 from 11am-12:30PM/Eastern\nAN ONLINE PRESENTATION\n1.5 CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDITS ARE AVAILABLE. Instructions about how to obtain available CEs are sent out to registrants in the entry link email\, prior to the event. If you miss that letter (for late sign-ups)\, you should request CE instructions after the event.\nFor general CE Credit information\, click here\nNOTE TO ALL REGISTRANTS FOR ONLINE EVENTS: We send out entry links for Zoom events 1-3 days prior to the scheduled event date. If you do not see a link-letter in your Inbox\, check your Trash and Spam folders. If you still see no link-letter by the business day prior to the event\, email: e.rodman@wawhite.org \nWe will do whatever we can to get your link to you\, however the Institute is not responsible for your email provider’s security settings. There are no refunds for paid events if a link was sent to you.\nNOTE: Confidentiality requirements prevent the recording of this presentation.\n\nCost: $30 per person\n  \nABOUT THIS EVENT\nThis presentation will address myths and stereotypes of depth therapies – specifically psychodynamic psychotherapy\, with racial and ethnic minority clients. Dr. Tummala-Narra will delineate how these misperceptions contribute to racial disparities in access to appropriate mental health care. She will explore how the historical neglect of sociocultural issues in clinical theory shape contemporary notions of depth therapy and call attention to how psychodynamic concepts are critical for culturally informed interventions. She will present research and clinical case vignettes to illustrate how sociocultural oppression\, such as racism and xenophobia\, can be engaged in the therapeutic relationship.\n  \nABOUT THE PsiAN SERIES\nIn these last few years\, we have witnessed unprecedented upheaval in the areas of politics\, social justice\, the natural world\, and public health. Alongside these national and global challenges\, we are amid a mental health crisis with decreasing access to psychotherapy. It is vitally important in order for our practices and communities to thrive to be informed about how depth therapies can help\, what people are looking for in mental health treatment\, and how we can support and protect the work we do\, while making it more accessible to more people.\nPrevailing myths and misconceptions regarding mental health and psychotherapy that either clinicians or the public hold need to be challenged\, as they limit our capacity to help more people in more circumstances and often steer the public\, including marginalized communities\, towards a reduced set of options.\nMany of these areas are not addressed in undergraduate and graduate education\, and therapists often start practicing without a greater understanding and appreciation of these issues and the very real ways in which they can impact and impede our work.\nThis webinar series will help students and therapists at all career stages develop a greater understanding of the mental health landscape\, and how they can protect and advance the work they do.\nRead about the Psychotherapy Action Network (PsiAN) \n  \nABOUT THE SPEAKER\n \nUsha Tummala-Narra\, PhD\, is a Professor of Counseling\, Developmental\, and Educational Psychology at Boston College. Her research and scholarship focus on immigration\, trauma\, and culturally informed psychoanalytic psychotherapy. She is also a clinical psychologist in Independent Practice and works primarily with survivors of trauma from diverse sociocultural backgrounds. Dr. Tummala-Narra is an Associate Editor of Psychoanalytic Dialogues and the Asian American Journal of Psychology. She is a member of the Holmes Commission on Racial Equality in American Psychoanalysis\, initiated by the American Psychoanalytic Association\, and a member of the Board of Directors of the Psychotherapy Action Network (PsiAN). She is the author of Psychoanalytic Theory and Cultural Competence in Psychotherapy (2016)\, the editor of Trauma and Racial Minority Immigrants: Turmoil\, Uncertainty\, and Resistance (2021)\, and co-author of Applying Multiculturalism: An Ecological Approach to the Multicultural Guidelines (2023)\, all published by the American Psychological Association Books. Dr. Tummala-Narra is the recipient of numerous awards and honors\, including being listed among the top 2% of Highly-Cited Scholars Worldwide (Stanford University Report).\n  \nABOUT THE MODERATOR\n \nBevin Campbell\, PsyD\, is a New York and New Jersey licensed psychologist treating couples and individuals in her Brooklyn-based psychotherapy practice. Dr. Campbell has a postgraduate certificate in Couple Therapy from Adelphi University and is an advanced candidate at the William Alanson White Institute. She is a teaching and supervising faculty member of the Health Psychology and School/Clinical Psychology programs at Pace university. She is a longtime PsiAN member and is the creator and host of PsiAN Speaks Live\, a quarterly forum on issues impacting contemporary mental healthcare.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/who-is-depth-therapy-suited-for-challenging-the-myths-and-stereotypes/
CATEGORIES:Legacy Layout,Members Events,Public
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241207T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241207T140000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20240926T154458Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241201T132135Z
UID:10000142-1733572800-1733580000@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:How are Sex and Gender Embodied in the Therapeutic  Relationship?
DESCRIPTION:THE 2024-2025 EMBODIMENT SERIES\nWilliam Cornell\, MA; Sarah Schoen\, PhD; Jack Foehl\, PhD; Stacy Berlin PsyD\,\nwith Moderators Doris Brothers\, PhD and Jon Sletvold\, PsyD\nHOW ARE SEX AND GENDER EMBODIED IN THE THERAPEUTIC RELATIONSHIP?\nSATURDAY\, DECEMBER 7th\, 2024\nOnline from 12 Noon – 2:00PM/Eastern\nThis series is presented in collaboration with The Wilhelm Reich Center for the Study of Embodiment.\n2 CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDITS ARE AVAILABLE. Instructions about how to obtain available CEs are sent out to registrants in the entry link email\, prior to the event. If you miss that letter (for late sign-ups)\, you should request CE instructions after the event.\nFor general CE Credit information\, click here\nNOTE TO ALL REGISTRANTS FOR ONLINE EVENTS: We send out entry links for Zoom events 1-3 days prior to the scheduled event date. If you do not see a link-letter in your Inbox\, you should check your Trash and Spam folders. If you have not received your link-letter by the business day prior to the event\, email: e.rodman@wawhite.org \nWe will do whatever we can to get your link to you\, however the Institute is not responsible for your email provider’s security settings. There are no refunds for paid events if a link was sent to you.\n  \nABOUT THIS EVENT\nFrom the earliest beginnings of psychoanalysis\, perceptions of sex and gender have greatly influenced the therapeutic relationship.  Societal upheavals in our world along with the turn toward embodiment have led to significant changes in our understanding of these concepts. Our speakers examine sex and gender in contemporary clinical practice from a variety of perspectives.\n  \nCOSTS\nProfessionals $50\nCandidates and Students $30\n\n  \nABOUT THE SPEAKERS\nSTACY BERLIN\, PsyD\, is a licensed psychologist and psychoanalyst in Studio City\, CA. She is on the Board of Directors for the International Forum for Psychoanalytic Education\, a Guest Editor for the journal Psychoanalytic Inquiry\, an Associate Editor for the journal Psychoanalysis Self and Context\, and an instructor at the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis. In her professional practice\, she takes an egalitarian and contextualist approach within a safe relational framework\, integrating creativity\, play\, and humor.\nWILLIAM CORNELL\, MA\, maintains an independent private practice of psychotherapy and consultation in Pittsburgh\, PA.  He teaches internationally with a primary focus on working with somatic processes and sexuality.  He is a founding faculty member of the recently inaugurated Western Pennsylvania Community for Psychoanalytic Therapies and is the author of Explorations in Transactional Analysis: The Meech Lake Papers\, Somatic Experience in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy: In the expressive language of the living\, Self-Examination in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy: Countertransference and subjectivity in clinical practice\, At the Interface of Transactional Analysis\, Psychoanalysis\, and Body Psychotherapy: Theoretical and clinical perspectives\, and Une Vie Pour Etre Soi.  He is a co-author and editor of Into TA: A comprehensive textbook\, which have been translated into several languages.  Bill has published numerous articles and book chapters\, many of which have been translated into French\, Italian\, German\, Portuguese\, and Chinese.  Bill edited and introduced books by James T. McLaughlin\, Warren Poland\, Wilma Bucci\, and Maurice Apprey.  An editor of the Transactional Analysis Journal for fifteen years\, he is now the Editor of the Routledge book series\, “Innovations in Transactional Analysis.”  Bill is a recipient of the Eric Berne Memorial Award and the European Association for Transactional Analysis Gold Medal\, in recognition of his writing.\nJACK FOEHL\, PhD\, is past-President of the Boston Psychoanalytic Society & Institute\, where he is Training and Supervising Analyst and is Supervisor and Faculty Member at the Massachusetts Institute for Psychoanalysis. He is Clinical Associate Professor at the NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis and is Lecturer at Harvard Medical School. Jack is Joint Editor-in-Chief of Psychoanalytic Dialogues and a past editorial board member of the International Journal of Psychoanalysis. Jack’s recent publications include Playing with Winnicott: Squiggling Through Therapeutic Consultations; The Slap: Playing with Reality in Discussing Trauma in 2022\, and Lived Depth: A Phenomenology of Psychoanalytic Process and Identity in 2020. He integrates Merleau-Ponty’s work on the lived body into a framework for teaching and experiencing psychoanalytic process.\nSARAH SCHOEN\, PhD\, is Faculty\, Supervising\, and Training Analyst at the William Alanson White Institute\, Adjunct Clinical Professor of Psychology at the New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis\, and Invited Faculty at the Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research. She is on the editorial board of Contemporary Psychoanalysis\, and she teaches and writes about contemporary perspectives on gender\, narcissism\, and the clinical implications of the relational turn. She is co-editor\, with J. Petrucelli and N. Snider\, of Patriarchy and its Discontents: Psychoanalytic Perspectives (2023). She is in private practice in Manhattan’s Flatiron District.\n\nABOUT THE MODERATORS/CO-DIRECTORS OF THE WILHELM REICH CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF EMBODIMENT\nDORIS BROTHERS\, PhD\, is a co-founder and faculty member of the Training and Research in Intersubjective Self Psychology Foundation (TRISP). She was co-editor with Roger Frie of Psychoanalysis\, Self and Context from 2015-2019 and is an associate editor of Psychoanalytic Inquiry. She serves on the council of the International Association of Psychoanalytic Self Psychology (IAPSP). Doris has published many journal articles and book chapters as well as four books. Her latest book\, written with Jon Sletvold is entitled A New Vision of Psychoanalytic Theory\, Practice and Supervision: TALKING BODIES. Her earlier books are: Toward a Psychology of Uncertainty: Trauma-Centered Psychoanalysis (2008)\, Falling Backwards: An Exploration of Trust and Self-Experience (1995)\, and with Richard Ulman\, The Shattered Self: A Psychoanalytic Study of Trauma (1988). She has presented her work internationally and leads supervision/study groups with Jon Sletvold. She sees patients in private practice in New York and Oslo.\n \nJON SLETVOLD\, PsyD\,  is founding board director and faculty member of the  Norwegian Character Analytic Institute.He has written articles and book chapters on embodiment in psychoanalytic theory\, practice\, and training. He is the editor of four books and the author of The Embodied Analyst: From Freud and Reich to Relationality\, which won the Gradiva Award in 2015.  In 2019 he wrote From Muscular Armor to Bodies in Dialogue with Per Harbitz. His latest book\, written with Doris Brothers is A New Vision of Psychoanalytic Theory\, Practice and Supervision: TALKING BODIES. Dr. Sletvold has presented his work internationally and co-leads online supervision/study groups on embodiment in Europe\, North America and China with Doris Brothers. He practices in Oslo and New York.\nABOUT THE WILHELM REICH CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF EMBODIMENT\nInspired by the pioneering work of Wilhelm Reich and encouraged by the recent surge of interest in embodiment among clinicians\, co-Directors Drs. Doris Brothers and Jon Sletvold have founded the Center. With it\, they are introducing an online forum for dialogues about the ways in which embodiment affects the theory and practice of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy.\nA wide range of approaches to embodiment have emerged in the last two decades that have led them to believe that a “turn toward embodiment” is underway. In the interest of furthering this turn they are offering a format that differs from the usual at psychoanalytic meetings. Rather than featuring a paper presenting a specific theorist or clinician followed by discussions\, they intend that each event will center around a specific topic. Speakers from around the world\, each of whom employs a different perspective on embodiment\, will be invited to participate in a roundtable conversation of the topic. Afterward\, online participants will be encouraged to join the conversation.\nLearn more about The Wilhelm Reich Center for the Study of Embodiment
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/how-are-sex-and-gender-embodied-in-the-therapeutic-relationship/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241211T203000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241211T220000
DTSTAMP:20260406T115858
CREATED:20241203T170927Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241203T170948Z
UID:10000150-1733949000-1733954400@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:LGBTQ Study Group - LEXI KOREN
DESCRIPTION:LEXI KOREN \n\n\nThe Global Assault on Youth Gender-Affirming Care: \nHow Opponents Hijacked the Narrative \n\nWednesday\, December 11\, 2024 \n8:30 – 10:00 PM (EST) \n\nOn Zoom only\, RSVP below  \nhttps://wawi.wufoo.com/forms/s1v361i7149pvzz/ \n\n  \nDescription: Over the past five years there has been an unprecedented assault on gender-affirming care for youth across the United States\, Canada\,Western Europe\, and Australia. This talk focuses on the international network of “Gender critical” feminists\, anti-affirming doctors and psychologists\, and the Christian right which have successfully hijacked the narrative around these treatments. It also focuses on how mainstream media in the US and abroad have bought into these narratives and how their coverage has been used to restrict care for this population. \n  \nSpeaker: Lexi Koren has worked in electoral politics and advocacy for over 14 years. She began researching and writing about the assault on youth gender-affirming care in 2022 after seeing the flood of disinformation on the topic and lack of adequate response. She published one of the first articles in the US that interviewed trans people in Sweden and Finland to understand why their countries were restricting trans health care. She writes media criticism of youth gender-affirming care coverage for FAIR\, and her recent piece on the Cass Review was one of the outlet’s top 10 articles of the year. She presented at the US Professional Association for Transgender Health (USPATH) conference in 2023 on the spread of disinformation about adolescent gender affirming care. \n  \n\n\nPlease note: \n\n  \n\nRegistrants will receive the Zoom link to attend this meeting via email from \nThe William Alanson White Institute with subject line: \n“LGBTQ Study Group 2024-2025”. \nLGBTQ Study Group events are not recorded. \nWe are not able to provide CE credits at this time. \nFor inquiries regarding The LGBTQ Study Group please contact the chair\, \nWilla N. France: poetadmiral@earthlink.net
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/lgbtq-study-group/
CATEGORIES:Modern Layout,Public
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