• Eros and Divine Madness: Questions and Reflections Inspired by Plato by Frances Coolidge, PhD (Psychoanalytic Explorations)

    Socrates maintains, in Plato’s Phaedrus, that eros is the highest form of divine madness. The central queries of my presentation are: is there a divine kind of madness? What is the meaning of eros construed as divine madness? Following, but diverging from, Plato’s Symposium, I propose that eros, understood as divine madness, is the capacity ... Read more

  • Tennessee Williams’ Emotional Suffering and Insights from “A Streetcar Named Desire” by W. Scott Griffies, M.D. (Psychoanalysis and Culture)

    Virtual Event via Zoom LA

    Sponsored by The Svenson Lectureship Fund for Psychoanalysis and the Arts in collaboration with Xavier University of Louisiana and The Tennessee Williams/New Orleans Literary Festival Tennessee Williams (1911-1983) is considered to be one of the greatest literary artists of the 20th century. His genius as a playwright, however did not save him from tragic emotional ... Read more

  • Psychoanalytic Approaches to Race, Multiracial Identities, and Racial Passing by Jessica Chavez, PhD (Psychoanalytic Explorations)

    NOBPC 3624 Coliseum Street, New Orleans, LA, United States

    Participants will be introduced to existing approaches to race in psychoanalysis. In order to address a dearth of psychoanalytic theorizing on multiracial identities and experiences of racial passing, Dr. Chavez will use an interdisciplinary lens to consider these topics while integrating case material and personal reflections and suggest new directions for conceptualizing work with patients ... Read more

  • Psychoanalytic Thoughts about “My Dinner with Andre” By John Rosegrant, PhD (Psychoanalytic Explorations)

    NOBPC 3624 Coliseum Street, New Orleans, LA, United States

    Participants will view and discuss the movie “My Dinner with Andre.” In this movie, two old friends talk about their life experiences and ideas about art in ways that encapsulate two fundamental approaches to existence: the romantic/Dionysian, and the classical/Apollonian. These different approaches have developmental roots in infancy and express very different self-states. The vicissitudes ... Read more

  • More Than One Can Live: Reconceiving Harm and Reparation in the Intersubjective World Scientific Program by Jessica Benjamin, PhD

    Virtual Event via Zoom LA

    In the therapeutic process, we encounter impasses where one must seemingly harm or be harmed by the other, and it feels as though there is only room for one psyche to live. This constellation was already implied by Klein’s writings, but this presentation will juxtapose her views to an intersubjective perspective: contrasting the intrapsychic idea ... Read more

  • Narcissistic States of Privilege by Stephen Anen, PhD (Psychoanalytic Explorations)

    NOBPC 3624 Coliseum Street, New Orleans, LA, United States

    Privilege is not just an aspect of identity that bestows impersonal, unmerited benefit and maintains the dominant status quo. Privilege is also a subjective experience that shapes and resonates within one’s experience of self and the world. Drawing upon Bach’s Narcissistic States and the Therapeutic Process along with more recent work on grandiosity and subjectivity, ... Read more

  • Can We Bear to Turn Our Psychoanalytic Attention Toward Those Who Are Other? Scientific Program by Anton Hart, PhD, FABP

    Virtual Event via Zoom LA

    At the present moment, it would behoove psychoanalytic practitioners to remember that psychoanalysis is a strange, minority discipline in relation to the rest of the world. Yet the psychoanalytic psychotherapists, as a group, regularly fail to employ their power to penetrate the surface, their customary stance of curiosity and their capacity for insight vis-a-vis their ... Read more

  • Working with Enactments by Webb Haymaker, LCSW-BACS (Psychoanalytic Explorations)

    NOBPC 3624 Coliseum Street, New Orleans, LA, United States

    In a 1986 article (“Countertransference Enactments”) that introduced the term enactment into the psychoanalytic literature, Ted Jacobs observed how his vigilant attention to a patient’s narratives foreclosed an opportunity to relax his own mind and follow his associations. Eventually, Jacobs’ reverie about his adolescent experience of the family dinner table - he was expected to ... Read more

  • Film Series: 12 Years a Slave presented by Dr. Marvin Clifford, Ph.D., LCSW-BACS

    NOBPC 3624 Coliseum Street, New Orleans, LA, United States

    2019-2020 Film Series: The Other in Film In the language of psychoanalysis, the Other is a name for the unconscious, that domain of human subjectivity ruled by phantasms that haunt us. It has been the project of psychoanalysis to articulate how these phantasms get displaced into the dynamics of interpersonal relationships as a defensive strategy ... Read more

  • New Time –Film Series: Blue Velvet presented by Webb Haymaker, LCSW-BACS

    NOBPC 3624 Coliseum Street, New Orleans, LA, United States

    Presents 2019-2020 Film Series: The Other in Film 10am - 1pm In the language of psychoanalysis, the Other is a name for the unconscious, that domain of human subjectivity ruled by phantasms that haunt us. It has been the project of psychoanalysis to articulate how these phantasms get displaced into the dynamics of interpersonal relationships ... Read more