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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250206T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250206T150000
DTSTAMP:20260610T011148
CREATED:20250114T182606Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250114T182812Z
UID:10000154-1738848600-1738854000@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Poets\, Artists and Analysts: Insight into Action with Erica Ehrenberg
DESCRIPTION:PRESENTED BY THE ARTIST STUDY GROUP OF THE PSYCHOTHERAPY SERVICE FOR PEOPLE IN THE ARTS\nPoets\, Artists and Analysts: Insight into Action\nwith Erica Ehrenberg\nThursday\, February 6\, 2025 from 1:30-3:00Pm/Eastern\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\nPoet and prose writer Erica Ehrenberg started writing poetry at a young age. As she pursued a life built around this work\, she felt it to be a process of self-definition — deeply influenced by\, but also in contrast to her parents’ careers as psychoanalysts. When she decided to pursue psychoanalytic training herself\, she discovered that being an artist and being a psychoanalyst fed each other and that the deeply creative\, expressive\, and relational links between the two were fundamental to her understanding of what it means to enact internal change in any context.\nFor this presentation she will be reading poems from her manuscript in progress\, which explores intimacy\, motherhood\, and the body.  She will also present excerpts from her paper\, On Not Knowing and the Relational Location of the Self\, where she asks what it means to work as a  psychoanalyst in the “generative unknown\,” and compares the work of poets and painters like Elizabeth Bishop and Philip Guston to Freud’s concept of the life instinct and to Winnicott’s “potential space.”\nErica Ehrenberg’s poetry and prose have appeared in numerous journals including  The New York Review of Books\, The Paris Review\, BOMB Magazine\, Slate\, The New Republic\, Everyman’s Library Pocket Poet Series\, Poetry Daily\, Guernica\, The Bennington Review\, The Mississippi Review\, The Harvard Review\, The Common as well as The Paris Review Podcast. She has been a Wallace Stegner Fellow in poetry at Stanford\, and a Poetry Fellow at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown. She has taught creative writing at Stanford Continuing Studies\, New York University\, Storm King Art Center\, and Fordham University. A recent graduate of The National Institute for the Psychotherapies (NIP) psychoanalytic training program\, Erica lives in New York City\, where she is establishing a private practice\, and teaches courses on the intersection of psychoanalysis\, art\, and literature.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/poets-artists-and-analysts-insight-into-action-with-erica-ehrenberg/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250222T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250222T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T011148
CREATED:20241219T171404Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250213T215134Z
UID:10000151-1740225600-1740232800@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:How are Blackness and Whiteness Embodied in the Clinical Encounter?
DESCRIPTION:THE 2024-2025 EMBODIMENT SERIES\nUdesh Anda\, PsyD\,  Fanny Brewster\, PhD\, MFA\,  Lynne Jacobs\, PhD\, and Guilaine Kinouani\nwith Moderators Doris Brothers\, PhD and Jon Sletvold\, PsyD\nHow are Blackness and Whiteness Embodied in the Clinical Encounter?\nSATURDAY\, FEBRUARY 22nd\, 2025\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\nAlthough therapists and patients have always lived in a world roiled by racism\, few psychoanalytic therapists have examined how racial differences affect the clinical situation. In the hope of bringing this important matter to the forefront of our attention\, this conversation focuses on the embodiment of blackness and whiteness within therapeutic contexts.\n\nCOSTS\nProfessionals $50\nCandidates and Students $30\n\nTHE SPEAKERS\nUdesh Anda\, PsyD\, is a clinical psychologist\, a specialist in child and adolescent psychology\, and a clinical society psychologist. He has worked in both the public and private sectors for over 30 years. Using a psychodynamic perspective and approach\, he has worked as as clinical practitioner for children and adolescents with emotional difficulties for more than 10 years. Since he is originally from Sri Lanka\, he offers education and counselling on minority issues. His special interest is on variables that are often unspoken\, yet sensitive for the people of minority origin.\nFanny Brewster\, PhD\, MFA\, is a Jungian analyst and Core Faculty member at Pacifica Graduate Institute. She completed her analytical training at  the C.G. Jung Institute of New York and is a New York State Licensed Psychoanalyst and Certified School Psychologist. She holds an M.F.A. degree in Creative Nonfiction from Goucher College.  Dr. Brewster is the author of several books\, including The Racial Complex: A Jungian Perspective on Culture and Race\, Archetypal Grief: Slavery’s Legacy of Intergenerational Child Loss\, African Americans and Jungian Psychology: Leaving the Shadows and Race and the Unconscious:  An Africanist Depth Psychology Perspective on Dreaming.  (All Routledge) Dr. Brewster is the recipient of the Fay Lectures honorarium of 2023 from the C.G. Jung Society of Houston.\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.\nGuilaine Kinouani is an award-winning writer\, psychologist\, group analyst\, and thinker. She is the founder of Race Reflections. She taught critical psychology\, social sciences and black studies at Syracuse before her PhD at Birkbeck. Her first book Living While Black (2021) exposes the impact of racism on black minds and bodies. Her second book\, White Minds (2023) is a psychosocial exploration of the quotidian workings of whiteness. In her upcoming co-edited collection: Creative Disruption: Psychosocial scholarship as praxis (2025)\, contributors explore power\, knowledge\, memory\, embodiment and the of potential of multidisciplinary approaches in fostering epistemic disruption. Guilaine’s thesis examines whiteness and the afterlives of colonialism and enslavement in the clinic using Afro-analytics\, a frame she is developing to rethink racial trauma\, inheritance\, transmission and associated issues of communication and embodiment within the black diaspora.\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.\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
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/how-are-blackness-and-whiteness-embodied-in-the-clinical-encounter/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250224T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250224T210000
DTSTAMP:20260610T011148
CREATED:20250205T191312Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250205T191312Z
UID:10000156-1740425400-1740430800@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy Training Program In Person Open House
DESCRIPTION:The Child & Adolescent Psychotherapy Training Program\nIN PERSON OPEN HOUSE\nMonday\, February 24\, 2025\n7:30-9:00 PM\nFamilies and High Conflict Divorce: Working within a Psychoanalytic Framework\nwith Erin Cantor\, LCSW\, Lisa Dubinsky\, PsyD\, and Jacqueline Ferraro\, DMH\nJoin us at the Institute\, 20 West 74th Street (between Central Park West & Columbus Avenues)\n\nABOUT THE PRESENTATION\nChildren during a high conflict divorce benefit from a combination of play\, arts and crafts\, and talk therapy. Their parents’ cooperation and engagement are crucial\, as with all child work\, but the relationship and legal issues make working with these parents complex.\n   \nOur presenters will discuss their work with children and parents at various stages of the separation/divorce process. ​ Describ​i​ng work with collateral professionals​ –including attorneys for the child and parent coordinators\, t​hey will address how these can be helpful but can also complicate treatment. ​I​mpacts on the clinician will also be addressed\, as countertransference feelings can be quite powerful.\nLight refreshments will be served following the presentation\nTHE PRESENTERS\nErin Cantor\, MA\, LCSW​\, is a child play therapist\, and adolescent\, adult and family psychoanalytic psychotherapist in private practice in New York City. She received post graduate training in Family Therapy from The Ackerman Institute and is intensively trained in Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT) from Behavioral Tech. Entering her final year in the three year child and adolescent psychotherapy training program (CAPTP) at The William Alanson White Institute\, Erin is also completing her first year in the Anni Bergman Parent Infant Program (ABPIP) with Contemporary Freudian Society (CFS) and Institute for Psychoanalytic Training and Research (IPTAR)\, also in New York City\, where she lives\, works and occasionally writes with her family.\nLisa Dubinsky\, PsyD​\, is the Director of the Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy Training Program at the William Alanson White Institute (CAPTP). She is a faculty member and supervisor of CAPTP.  Lisa worked at the Jewish Board in the Early Childhood Program\, including developmental evaluations\, play therapy\, small group therapy\, and parent guidance.  She has worked for many years with children\, adolescents\, and adults\, and providing preschool consultation and parent workshops on topics relevant to young children.\nJacqueline Ferraro\, DMH\, is Executive Committee member\, faculty and supervisor in both the Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy Training Program (CAPTP) and in the Eating Disorders\, Compulsions and Addictions Service (EDCAS) at the William Alanson White Institute. Dr. Ferraro is in private practice in Manhattan working with children\, adolescents\, and adults.\n 
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/child-and-adolescent-psychotherapy-training-program-in-person-open-house/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250226T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250226T210000
DTSTAMP:20260610T011148
CREATED:20250205T170259Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250205T171039Z
UID:10000155-1740598200-1740603600@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Psychoanalytic Training Program Open House with Clinical Case Presentation
DESCRIPTION:Psychoanalytic Training Program In Person Open House\nWednesday\, February 26th from 7:30-9:00pm\nFollow Me\, I’ll Show You the Way: Trauma\, Twinship\, and Transference in an Analytic Training\nA Clinical Case Presentation and Discussion\nby BIAGIO MASTROPIERI\, PhD\, Candidate\nwith ERNESTO MUJICA\, PhD\, Case Discussant\nand TOMAS CASADO-FRANKEL\, LMFT\, Moderator\nThe evening will also include a brief history of the Institute by Elizabeth Krimendahl\, PsyD\, Executive Director\, and an overview of the Psychoanalytic Training Program by Seth Aronson\, Director of Admissions. Light refreshments will follow the presentation\, discussion and a Q&A.\nThe Institute is located at 20 West 74th Street\, between Central Park West and Columbus Avenues.\nBiagio Mastropieri\, PhD\, 2nd year Candidate in the Institute’s Psychoanalytic Training Program\, has a private practice in New York City. He earned his doctorate at Columbia University and completed a pre-doctoral internship at Mount Sinai St. Luke’s Roosevelt Hospitals in New York. Dr. Mastropieri previously served as Program Director for Project Rising\, an outpatient treatment program at Montefiore Medical Center.\nErnesto Mujica\, PhD\, Psychotherapy  Supervisor at WAWI and Director of its Sexual Abuse Study Group & Service. He is also an Associate Editor for Contemporary Psychoanalysis\, journal of the Institute and Psychoanalytic Society. Dr. Mujica was past President of the Division of Psychoanalysis for the NYS Psychological Association and served on the Board of the Society for Psychoanalysis and Psychology (Division 39) of the American Psychological Association. He is also faculty of the Korean Institute of Clinical Psychoanalysis in Seoul\, and is a Facilitator at MenHealing.org.\nTomás Casado-Frankel\, LMFT\, WAWI Director of Outreach and Recruitment\, is a graduate of both its Psychoanalytic Training Program and the Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy Training Program. He is co-author of Early Relational Trauma and the Development of Self\, published by Routledge in 2022.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/psychoanalytic-training-program-open-house-with-clinical-case-presentation/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250228T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250228T110000
DTSTAMP:20260610T011148
CREATED:20240807T171648Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250129T185448Z
UID:10000140-1740740400-1740740400@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:EMPOWERING CLINICIANS: PRACTICAL TOOLS TO SUPPORT MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT
DESCRIPTION:The PsiAN Series: Advocating for Our Patients\, Our Practice and Ourselves\nJOE FELDMAN\, MBA\nKATE GALLAGHER\, PhD\nBRIAN HUFFORD\, ESQ\nEMPOWERING CLINICIANS: PRACTICAL TOOLS TO SUPPORT MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT\nwith Moderator Bevin Campbell\, PsyD\nFriday\, February 28th 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\nABOUT THIS EVENT\nIn an ideal world\, everyone would have access to affordable\, quality health insurance. Clinicians would provide the care that’s needed\, and insurers would reliably process and pay claims. If problems arose\, laws\, regulations\, and litigation would ensure compliance and fairness and help protect patients and their treatment. After all\, health insurance benefits are designed to help people access the care they need to maintain their health and well-being without facing overwhelming obstacles and financial burdens.\nRegrettably\, this ideal system remains elusive. Disparities in insurance coverage\, especially for mental health\, routinely force people to choose between forgoing essential care or incurring massive out-of-pocket expenses. When it comes to therapies of depth\, insight and relationship\, obtaining appropriate insurance coverage may be especially difficult. For those already facing mental health and addiction issues\, navigating insurance denials and fighting for appropriate coverage can be a daunting prospect. When the system falls short\, advocacy by patients and clinicians may be required. Yet\, many clinicians feel equally disempowered and lost.\nThe purpose of this panel is to empower clinicians with the knowledge and resources needed to support patients in obtaining appropriate reimbursement for treatment. Drawing on their diverse professional backgrounds\, panelists will identify common barriers to care\, demystify the systemic factors underlying these barriers\, and provide practical resources – tools\, templates\, step-by-step instructions – to address them.\n\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  \n\nABOUT THE PANELISTS\nKathryn (Kate) Gallagher\, PhD\, is a staff psychologist\, psychoanalyst\, and faculty member at the Austen Riggs Center. She is also in private practice in Stockbridge\, MA. In addition to her clinical practice\, Dr. Gallagher is committed to addressing human rights and health equity issues. This often takes the form of supporting patient and clinician efforts to obtain insurance coverage for medically necessary behavioral health care.\n  \n\n  \nJoe Feldman\, MBA\, is President and Founder of Cover My Mental Health. He began advocating for access to mental health care after overcoming denials for his daughter’s residential care\, including with a successful federal lawsuit. His advocacy work has included policy-driven discussions with legislators and regulators\, a board role with The Kennedy Forum Illinois\, presentations to parent groups\, and publication of actionable guidance such as a 2021 article in the Journal of Psychiatric Practice on medical necessity letters (including a letter template).\n  \n  \n\nBrian Hufford\, Esq\, a graduate of the Yale Law School\, is a Partner at Zuckerman Spaeder LLP in New York City. Over the past two decades\, he has been an industry leader in challenging improper denials and underpayments by health insurance companies and claims administrators on behalf of providers\, provider associations\, and patients. His efforts include a national legal effort that is systematically challenging mental health discrimination by insurers. In his innovative and nationally recognized practice\, Mr. Hufford’s work has provided relief to tensof thousands of individuals who have been impacted by widespread mental health discrimination or other forms of improper coverage denials\, forced policy changes by insurers\, and significantly influenced health care law. These efforts have led to two of the largest recoveries ever obtained in ERISA-based health insurance class actions\, and to a collection of other precedent-setting decisions that have transformed the rights of patients and providers. Mr. Hufford led the team behind the landmark case Wit v. United Behavioral Health\, which has been recognized as one of the most important litigations addressing the legal rights of patients seeking appropriate coverage for their behavioral health services.\nMr. Hufford has received numerous honors and designations relating to his work\, including being honored with the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) 2021 Rona and Ken Purdy Award for Distinguished Service for his sustained contributions to improving the lives of people who suffer from mental illness and their families. He has been awareded Law360’s “MVP” Award five times\, twice been named a Plaintiff’s Attorney “Trailblazer” by The National Law Journal\, and has been consistently recognized in industry rankings such as Benchmark Litigation and Super Lawyers. He is also a Board member of PsiAN\, in addition to many other leadership positions. Married to his wife\, Wendy\, another attorney\, Mr. Hufford is the proud father of eight children.\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.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/empowering-clinicians-practical-tools-to-support-mental-health-treatment/
CATEGORIES:Legacy Layout,Members Events,Public
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250228T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250228T193000
DTSTAMP:20260610T011148
CREATED:20240427T184633Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241118T163029Z
UID:10000133-1740771000-1740771000@wawhite.org
SUMMARY:Donnel Stern\, PhD\, Thinking Where We Are Not: Interpellation\, Dissociative Enactment\, and the Social
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\nDONNEL STERN\, PhD\nThinking Where We Are Not: Interpellation\, Dissociative Enactment\, and the Social\nFRIDAY\, FEBRUARY 28th\, 7:30-9:30PM\nwith Deborah Fraser\, PhD\, Moderator\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\nIn the interest of integrating the social and the individual in psychoanalysis\, the author examines the relation of interpellation and enactment. Interpellation is a way of conceptualizing the creation of subjectivity via individual participation in the ideological tropes of power. Enactment is our psychoanalytic way of referring to unconscious participation in relatedness. In interpellation\, one person is “hailed” by another in a way that inducts the person so addressed\, without the awareness of either party\, into a relational pattern that includes both. The author argues that we can see the same process in dissociative enactment. Clinical process is illuminated by the recognition of the continuity of the social and the individual that is modeled by the relation of these two dissociative processes. New meaning–the formulation of unformulated experience–comes about unbidden\, sometimes slipping the traces of ideology. Paraphrasing an aphorism from Lacan: We think where we are not.\n1.5 CEs are available for attending this presentation. \n\nABOUT THE SPEAKER\nDonnel Stern\, PhD\, is Training and Supervising Analyst\, and Faculty at the William Alanson White Institute in New York City; and Adjunct Clinical Professor and Clinical Consultant\, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy. He is founder and editor of the Psychoanalysis in a New Key book series from Routledge\, which has 90 titles in print. He is former Editor-in-Chief of Contemporary Psychoanalysis.  He has published five books\, the most recent of which has just appeared\, On Coming into Possession of Oneself: Transformations of the Interpersonal Field. He has also co-edited four books about the theory and practice of interpersonal psychoanalysis. Dr. Stern is in private practice in New York City.\n  \nABOUT THE MODERATOR\nDeborah Fraser\, PhD\, is a Training and Supervising Psychoanalyst at the William Alanson White Institute\, where she is a member of the teaching faculty. She also serves on several key committees\, including the Council of Fellows\, the Training and Progression Committee\, and the Nominations and Elections Committee. In addition to her work at the Institute\, she maintains a full-time private practice in New York City.
URL:https://wawhite.org/event/don-stern-phd-interpellation-and-dissociative-enactment-the-continuity-of-the-social-and-the-individual/
CATEGORIES:Members Events,Modern Layout,Public
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