Psychoanalysis
and Cinema: Turning Points
Fridays, October 26, November 30, 2007, January
25, February 29, March 28, April 25, May 30, 2008
(seven sessions)
Coordinator: Julio Szmuilowicz
The screening of the film will commence at 7:30
p.m. After a short break, a paper will be presented,
followed by discussion.
|
Psychotherapy
through Literature: Psychoanalytic Perspective on
Contemporary Short Fiction
Thursdays, November 1, 8, 15, 22, 2007 (four sessions)
Coordinator: Donald Carveth
Psychoanalytic
Activism
Thursdays, January 10, 17, 24, 31, February 7, 2008
(five sessions)
Coordinator: Judith Deutsch
Introduction
to Lacan: On Femininity
Thursdays, January 17, 24, 31, February 7, 14, 2008
(five sessions)
Coordinator: Judith Hamilton
Attachment
Theory and Practice: A Move to Representation
Thursdays, March 27, April 3, 10, 17, 24, 2008 (five
sessions)
Coordinator: Elizabeth Tuters
| Presentation |
|
7:308:30
p.m. |
| Coffee |
|
8:308:45
p.m. |
| Discussion
groups |
|
8:4510:00
p.m. |
All
sessions will be held at the Toronto Psychoanalytic
Society, 40 St. Clair Avenue East, Suite 203, Toronto.
Further information about the Extension Program
may be obtained from Jean Bowlby, executive secretary,
Toronto Psychoanalytic Society, 416-922-7770.
|
Planning
Committee
Chair: Christine Dunbar, MBChB, psychoanalyst
Sarah Freke, MD, psychoanalyst in private practice;
faculty member, Toronto Institute of Psychoanalysis,
and the Advanced Training Program in Psychoanalytic
Psychotherapy, TPS
Judith Hamilton, MD, psychoanalyst in private
practice; faculty member, Toronto Institute of Psychoanalysis;
director, Advanced Training Program in Psychoanalytic
Psychotherapy, TPS
Christopher Olive, MD, psychoanalyst in private
practice; faculty member, Toronto Institute of Psychoanalysis,
and Advanced Training Program in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy;
lecturer, Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto
Sandra Palef, PhD, psychoanalyst in private practice;
faculty member, Toronto Institute of Psychoanalysis,
Institute for the Advancement of Self Psychology, and
Toronto Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis
S. Sadavoy, MSW, psychoanalyst and psychotherapist
in private practice
Julio Szmuilowicz, MD, psychoanalyst in private
practice; faculty member, Toronto Institute of Psychoanalysis
Faculty
Doron Almagor, MD, psychoanalyst in private practice,
psychotherapy supervisor at the University Health Network,
faculty, Advanced Training Program in Psychoanalytic
Psychotherapy
Paul Antze, PhD,* associate professor, Social
Science and Graduate Programs, Social and Political
Thought and Social Anthropology, York University
Donald Carveth, PhD, professor of sociology and
social and political thought, York University; training
and supervising analyst in the Canadian Institute of
Psychoanalysis
Arthur Caspary, PhD, psychoanalyst in private
practice; head, Psychology Department and director of
Internal Academic Training, Hincks Dellcrest Centre;
faculty, Toronto Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis
Rex Collins, PhD, private practice child and
adolescent therapy; graduate of the Toronto Child Psychotherapy
Program
Judith Deutsch, MSW, RSW, psychoanalyst in private
practice, treating children, adolescents, and adults
Jacinta O'Hanlon, LRCP, SI, psychoanalyst in
private practice; faculty, Toronto Institute of Psychoanalysis
and the Advanced Training Program in Psychoanalytic
Psychotherapy
Clive Thomson, PhD, psychoanalyst in private
practice; graduate, TICP; professor, Department of French
Studies, Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry,
University of Western Ontario; TPS guest
Elizabeth Tuters, RSW, child/adult psychoanalyst,
faculty/supervisor TCPP, ATPPP, IASP, team leader, Infant-Parent
Program, Hincks Dellcrest Centre
Ruhi Tuzlak, MBA,* executive member of the Society
for the Advancement of Clinical Social Work of Toronto;
adult education specialist, occupational health and
safety professional, Toronto District School Board
Barrie A. Wilson, PhD,* professsor, humanities
and religious studies, York University
Robert Winer, MD,* teaching analyst and chair
of the Faculty Committee, Washington Psychoanalytic
Institute; chair, New Directions and of the Modern Perspectives
on Psychotherapy Program, Washington Psychoanalytic
Society; psychoanalyst in private practice, Bethesda,
MD
Susan Yabsley, PhD, graduate of Anna Freud Centre
and Head, Infant Program, Hincks-Dellcrest Institute,
TPS guest
* By invitation
Course Director: Julio Szmuilowicz
Psychic determinism is the basis of psychoanalysis.
There is a reason for everything we choose, and everything
we do happens by choice, whether conscious or unconscious.
Thus, what we are, where we go, and how we end up thereour
"destiny"-is the sum of the choices we have made
and not created by circumstances, even if they are sometimes
forced on us.
Through the work of Erik Erikson, among others, we are
familiar with the concept of developmental nodal pointscrossroads
confronting us with life-changing pressuresforcing
us to choose paths with far-reaching implications. In
more vernacular terms, throughout the course of our
lives we face vital turning points in which we elect
to either veer left or right, up or down, change or
sameness. Whatever we choose commits us to a road different
from others and deprives us of the possible benefits
(or avoids the dangers) of the path(s) not taken (Sartre
called this an "existential crisis").
To explore the theme of turning points, seven films
will be screened. After a short break, the film's discussant
will present a formal paper that will lead the group
into a general discussion.
|
Date
|
Film
Discussant
|
Film
|
October
26, 2007
|
Barrie
Wilson |
Run, Lola Run (1998)
Tom Tykwer |
| November
30, 2007 |
Ruhi
Tuzlak |
Coup
de Torchon (Clean Slate) (1981)
Bertrand Tavernier |
| January
25, 2008 |
Julio
Szmuilowicz |
Sliding
Doors (1998)
Peter Howitt |
| February
29, 2008 |
Julio
Szmuilowicz |
Steam:
The Turkish Bath (1997)
Ferzan Ozpetek |
| March
28, 2008 |
Rex
Collins |
Wetherby
(1985)
David Hare |
| April
25, 2008 |
Arthur
Caspary |
12
Angry Men (1957)
Sidney Lumet |
| May
30, 2008 |
Robert
Winer |
The
Lives of Others (2006)
Florian Henkel von Donnersmark |
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Course Director: Donald Carveth
Psychoanalysis has often been applied in the understanding
of literature, but this can be a two-way street. As
Freud himself certainly understood in mining the works
of the likes of Sophocles and Shakespeare for psychological
insight, literature can inform psychoanalysis as well
as being interpreted by it. For each of the four Thursday
evenings we will read, discuss, and analyze a piece
of contemporary short fiction that illuminates a form
of human experience of psychoanalytic interest: Jonathan
Carroll, Home on the Rain (schizoid personality);
Isaac Bashevis Singer, Enemies: A Love Story
(masochism); Alice Munro, Postcard (delusional
obsessiveness); and Frank Conroy, Midair (unconscious
repetition of trauma).
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Coordinator: Judith Deutsch
This course will explore the opposite pole of subjectivity:
the role psychoanalysis has played, and can play, in
the real external socio-political world. Discussion
will focus on (1) psychoanalysis until 1938Freud's
contributions to the interface between individuals intrapsychic
and group processes, W. Reich on fascism, the Free Clinics
and left-wing analysts who at times ran afoul of the
authorities of the day; (2) psychoanalysis in the twenty-first
centuryfocusing on Leo Rangell and his broad psychoanalytic
approach, examining the "compromise of integrity" (Rangell's
term for superego pathology) and how the public colludes
with deeply flawed leaders; (3) psychoanalytic contributions
to understanding prejudice and racism; (4) the contribution
of psychoanalysts of the child to understanding the
rights of the child and what makes it so hard for societies
to protect children as in child-custody decisions, child
poverty, child soldiers, AIDS, etc.; (5) psychoanalytic
activismunderstanding acting out vs. acting, the
realistic difficulties and the resistances to acting
as individuals, as clinicians, taking stands at the
organizational level.
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Coordinator: Judith Hamilton
In this sixth introductory session of the theory and
techniques articulated by the French psychoanalyst Jacques
Lacan we will continue to explore basic concepts. Using
Seminar XX, Encore, as a reference text, we will
present Lacan's proposals concerning sexual difference,
love, and jouissance, in one of the best-known,
more accessible, and shortest of his seminars. For Lacan,
masculinity and femininity are not biological essences
but symbolic positions, and the assumption of one of
these two positions is fundamental to the construction
of subjectivity. Man and woman are signifiers.
There follows a fascinating theory on the asymmetry
between the two positions and its implications. For
example, Lacan claimed that "woman would only enter
in the sexual relation as a mother." Hence there is
no real "sexual relation" and love as well as speech
make up for this absence." However, woman reaches a
"supplementary jouissance," which puts her in
a certain relation with "the act of saying." "For man
she is on the side of 'the truth' and man does not know
what to do with it" (Marcelle Marini, 1992). Aspects
of these topics will be covered in five evenings of
seminar-style presentations with ample discussion. We
welcome previous participants for these further developments
in Lacan's theory, and will also attempt to make the
material accessible to those attending for the first
time. A previous reading of Seminar XX would enhance
any participant's enjoyment.
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Coordinator: Elizabeth Tuters
This course will focus on clinical applications of John
Bowlby's Attachment Theory. This theory stresses survival
and adaptation in the context of relationships with
protective others as critical components in human development
and psychopathology. Individuals have internal working
models of attachment relations that guide their relations
with important others through life. In this course we
will review ways of assessing internal working models
from looking at behaviour to language, as well as other
theories of early infancy, and their clinical implications
to work with adults.
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For
further information about the TPS&I Extension Program,
contact info@torontopsychoanalysis.com
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