News & Events

Conferences
From Conflict Theory to Theorists in Conflict
The place of modern psychoanalysis in the contemporary landscape
Saturday, June 21, 2008, 1:00-4:30 pm
1581 Beacon Street, Brookline, MA
Psychoanalysts today are faced with a plethora of schools of thought, each one seeming to suggest that it is an improvement on or an important addition to all others. Each school has its devotees with varying degrees of tolerance or interest in other perspectives. Where do these different theories come from—do they each have a fundamental “truth” that differs from all others? What are the common roots across schools and what are the divergent emphases and developments? How does one assess which theory is most applicable in the clinical setting? Does one’s theory shape what one sees clinically?
These are some of the questions that students of modern psychoanalysis, whether beginning their training or far into their professional careers, are often faced with in this day and age. Where is modern psychoanalysis located within the “grand narrative” of psychoanalytic thought and practice, what are its contributions, its congruences with other theoretical and clinical approaches, its dissimilarities? This conference marks an attempt to address these and similar questions.
Presenters:
Robert J. Marshall, Ph.D. (New York): "Imagine There Are No Mirrors. Imagine there are mirrors everywhere".
Robert Marshall has enjoyed clinical experience in the U.S. Army, a veteran's administration hospital, a residential school for delinquents, private clinics, psychoanalytic institutes, and private practice. His bibliography reflects his professional journey. He is a Licensed Clinical Psychologist and has been chair of the Publications Committee of Division 39 of the American Psychological Association. He has helped found two outpatient psychotherapy clinics. He is the author of "Resistant Interactions: Child, Family and Therapist" New York, Human Sciences Press, 1983 and with co-author, Simone V. Marshall, Ph.D. "The Transference-Countertransference Matrix: The Cognitive-Emotional Dialogue in Psychotherapy, Psychoanalysis and Supervision, Columbia University Press.
Joseph Scalia III, M.Ed. Cert. Psya (Montana) "The Enduring Place of Drive and the Oedipus and Castration Complexes in Psychoanalysis."
Joseph Scalia is a psychoanalyst in private practice in Bozeman, Montana and is Executive Director of Northern Rockies Psychoanalytic Institute. He is the author of Intimate Violence: Attacks Upon Psychic Interiority, the editor of The Vitality of Objects: Exploring the Work of Christopher Bollas, and a recipient of the Gradiva Award for "A Psychoanalytic Introduction to the Understanding and Treatment of Batterers." Mr. Scalia is President of the Montana Wilderness Association, the oldest statewide wilderness organization in the United States. He is a member of the Society of Modern Psychoanalysts and of the Chicago Circle of L'École Freudienne du Québec.
Discussant:
Jane Snyder, Ph.D. Cert. Psya (Boston) is Provost, training and supervising analyst at the Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis and a member of the Society of Modern Psychoanalysts. Dr. Snyder has worked with children, families, adults, and trainees in hospital, clinic and private practice settings. She teaches and writes on a variety of topics integrating theory with clinical work including working with the action prone patient, understanding enactment, gender and gender dysphoria, and understanding therapeutic action.
Moderator:
Rodrigo Barahona, Cert. Psya., Psya. D. LADC-1., Faculty, BGSP is a certified psychoanalyst and licensed clinical supervisor, specialized in addictions, in private practice in Jamaica Plain and Brookline, as well as founder, program director and supervisor at the Latino Partial Hospitalization Dual Diagnosis Group Psychotherapy Program at the Arbour Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts. He is a faculty member at the Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis, as well as adjunct faculty at the Center for Psychoanalytic Studies in San Jose, Costa Rica. He has published and lectured on Modern Psychoanalysis locally as well as abroad. Dr. Barahona is also a member of the American Psychological Association, Division 39, the Society of Modern Psychoanalysis, and the Costa Rican Association for Psychoanalysis and Social Psychology. He is currently co-authoring (with Eddy Carillo Retana) the Costa Rica chapter in the upcoming State Violence and the Right to Peace: An International Survey of the Views of Ordinary People Greenwood Publishing Group / Praeger series.
Suggested readings:
Barahona, R. (2004) Conflict and Deficit in Modern Psychoanalysis. Modern Psychoanalysis. 29(2).
Marshall, R. (2006) Suppose There Were No Mirrors: Converging Concepts of Mirroring. Modern Psychoanalysis, 31 (2).
Scalia, J. (2006) A plea for Classical Neurosis in Modern Psychoanalysis. Modern Psychoanalysis. 31(1).
Snyder, J. (2006) Modern Psychoanalysis Meets André Green: The Case of Z. Modern Psychoanalysis. 31(1).
To register, contact Caroline Egnaczyk at 617-277-3915 or bgsp@bgsp.edu

Annual Cape Cod Conference
Back to Basics II: Working with Resistance
Wellfleet, MA
July 7-11, 2008
Full institute $200 before June 21
$250 after June 21
$150 for students before June 21
$200 for students after June 21
Daily: $70
For more information or to register, contact bgsp@bgsp.edu or call 617-277-3915.
The Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis hosts its twenty-fourth annual summer conference this year from July 7-11 in Wellfleet, MA. Join us as BGSP faculty guide exploration of the theoretical and technical approaches to resistance as it arises in the course of treatment, and in the course of our conference discussions. Focus on the topic of resistance continues our discussion of the basic tenets of psychoanalysis which began last summer with the theme of transference. This year we explore the theory and technique the therapist uses in working with resistance.
Hyman Spotnitz, the father of modern psychoanalysis, describes five kinds of resistance that occur in the course of treatment. They are: treatment destructive, status quo, resistance to progress, resistance to cooperation and resistance to termination. Each conference day will examine one type of resistance. A case presentation will illuminate the arousal and handling of the status quo resistance.
MONDAY, July 7nd: WHAT IS A RESISTANCE AND WHY DO WE CARE? EARLY TREATMENT RESISTANCES
Jane Snyder
Lynn Perlman
The first morning session will provide an overview of psychoanalytic theory of resistance with an emphasis on modern psychoanalytic formulations on five types of resistance and their importance to analytic work.
The second half of the morning’s discussion will center on resistances that arise early in the treatment relationship.
MONDAY EVENING, July 7nd: MAGIC FOR GROWNUPS
Eugene Goldwater
You have requested an urgent favor from a frog. In return, he wants to sleep with you! You feel nothing but disgust for this sleazy, slimy creature. What should you do?
Long before the discovery of unconscious sexuality and aggression, the brothers Grimm gave the true answer to this and many other common life problems in their great collection of folk tales. Unfortunately, modern adaptations often distort or suppress their advice—no, the princess in their story most certainly did not kiss the frog! But we can still learn valuable lessons from the Grimms, and from other experts on the magic of everyday life, like Sigmund Freud and J.K. Rowling.
Find out what really happened, and what this story really teaches. And be prepared to consider—and share your own experiences of—other issues of daily life, great and small, such as:
How to transform into a princess—in three seconds flat!
The Goddess, the Witch and the Wardrobe: dress magic
Magical words, names and spells
Planes, trains and automobiles: the magic of “inanimate” objects
Influences of Mars and Venus on Earth
Wands, charms, potions, rings—which are a few of your favorite things? And why?
TUESDAY, July 8rd: STATUS QUO RESISTANCE
Elizabeth Dorsey and Pat Hugenberger
Status quo patterns appear in the treatment in a variety of forms. Essentially, they involve a resistance to analytic progress and a communication of the message; “I don’t want anything new.” There will be a brief description of the various forms which status quo resistance may take, followed by a case presentation and discussion.
WEDNESDAY, July 9th: BREAK
THURSDAY, July 10th: PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PARENTING: RESISTANCE TO PROGRESS
Resistance to Cooperation
Eugene Goldwater
Mara Wagner
The resistance to progress encountered in the psychoanalytic relationship has precise parallels to children’s conflicts over “growing up.” Insight into how these issues play out both in the transference, and in the countertransference (analogous to the parent’s ambivalence about the child growing up) enables therapeutic attitudes and interventions.
The second half of the morning will explore resistance to cooperation.
FRIDAY, July 11th: ANALYSIS TERMINABLE AND INTERMINABLE
June Bernstein
Jill Solomon
As the conference draws to a close our thoughts turn to termination and our resistance to giving up meaningful relationships. Is there such a thing as a completed analysis with a planned and worked through termination? Or is the impulse to terminate on the part of either the analyst or the patient a resistance to an ever deeper mutual understanding beneficial to the patient’s life? Are life-long analyses defensible as being in the best interest of the patient and/or are they a luxury for both patient and analyst? We explore these issues in the context of saying goodbye at the end of our week together.
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