Michael Brearley (British Psychoanalytical Society): ‘What do psychoanalysts do?’
John Cottingham (University of Reading): ‘A Triangle of Hostility? Psychoanalysis, Philosophy and Religion’.
Ritchie Robertson (St John’s, Oxford): ‘Freud as a Romantic: his place in the history of ideas’.
Institute of Psychoanalysis Introductory Lectures on DVD (academic year 2007-08)
Michaelmas Term. Angela Joyce: ‘The Oedipus Complex’ and Jenny Stoker (Institute of Psychoanalysis): ‘Playing’. Discussion led by Richard Rusbridger (University College, London).
Hilary Term. Betty Joseph (British Psychoanalytical Society): ‘The Depressive Position’ and ‘The Paranoid-Schizoid Position’. Discussion led by Denise Cullington (private practice).
Hilary Term. Catia Galariotou: ‘Defences’ and Susan Budd (British Psychoanalytical Society): ‘The Unconscious’. Discussion led by Eleanor Nowers (British Psychoanalytic Council).
Trinity Term. David Bell (Institute of Psychoanalysis): ‘Psychoanalysis and Society’ and Marie Bridge (Institute of Psychoanalysis): ‘Psychoanalysis and Literature’. Discussion led by Marie Bridge.
Trinity Term. Sara Flanders (Institute of Psychoanalysis): ‘Dreams’ and Rosemary Davies (Institute of Psychoanalysis): ‘Mourning and Melancholia’.
Psychoanalysis and the Work of Melanie Klein (with the Melanie Klein Trust) (Saturday 25 April 2009)
Priscilla Roth (British Psychoanalytical Society): ‘Using Projective Identification’.
Ronald Britton (British Psychoanalytical Society): ‘Is the truth therapeutic?’
Betty Joseph (British Psychoanalytical Society): ‘Uses of the past in the psychoanalytic process’.
Psychoanalysis and/in Social Science (Saturday 17 October 2017)
Louise Gyler (Australian Psychoanalytical Society): ‘“Thinking in cases”: Meaning and the “act” of knowing’.
Trenholme Junghans (CRASSH, Cambridge): ‘Leveraging “the Real” in Pharmaceutical Development: Psychodynamic and Semiotic Perspectives on Accountability’.
David Kaposi (Open University): ‘Psychoanalysis and the Social Sciences: Possible Relations’.
Keir Martin (University of Oslo): ‘The performative effects of “culture” in contemporary psychotherapy training and practice’.
Jeffrey Murer (St Andrews): ‘Four Funerals and a Monument: Established Pathological Mourning and the Politics of Splitting in Collective Memory in Contemporary Hungary’.
David Taylor (British Psychoanalytical Society and University College, London): ‘The Effect of Treatment Outcome Studies on the Public Standing of Psychoanalysis: the case of the Tavistock Adult Depression Study’.
Psychoanalysis and/in Social Science (Saturday 6 October 2018)
Steven Groarke (Roehampton University): ‘Imaginative acts: a note on Winnicott and Loewald’.
Louise Gyler (Australian Psychoanalytical Society): ‘The dread of the feminine and modes of psychic experience’.
Jeffrey Murer (University of St Andrews): ‘Violent Expressions: Anxiety, anger and the social superego among Europe’s Far Right’.
Daria Martin (University of Oxford): ‘Tonight the World [short art film in progress]’.
Keir Martin (University of Oslo): ‘The relocation of cultural experience’.
St John’s College Research Centre: A Workshop on Psychoanalysis and Social Science (Saturday 12 October 2019)
Louise Braddock (University of Oxford): ‘Remembering, repeating and getting stuck, or “How societies imagine”’.
Steven Groarke (Roehampton University): ‘Drifting back in time: a note on memory and the past in the analytic situation’.
David Kaposi (Open University): ‘Saving a victim from himself – Dynamics of Presence and Absence in the Milgram Experiments’.
Sarah Marks (Birkbeck, University of London): ‘Historical reflections on intergenerational transmission of trauma’.
Keir Martin (University of Oslo): ‘The Location of Dreams’.
David Russell (University of Oxford): ‘John Ruskin and the Dream of Painting’.
Topics in Interdisciplinary Psychoanalytic Thought: Papers on Trauma and Transmission (Saturday 2 - Sunday 3 October 2021)
Shaul Bar-Haim, 'The Shadow of Narcissism: (Jewish) Self-Hatred in the Age of Identity Politics'.
Louise Braddock (Independent): ‘Shame as an Object-Relational Defence’.
Katie Fleming (QMUL): 'Walter Benjamin, Violence, Niobe, and Guilt'.
Elisa Galgut (Cape Town), 'Wollheim on Images of Mind'.
Niall Gildea (Lancaster University): 'Wollheim's Shapes'.
Richard Wollheim Study Day: Painting as an Art (Saturday 22 January 2022)
Papers from Elisa Galgut (University of Cape Town) and Niall Gildea (Lancaster University), and roundtable discussion.
Michael Uebel (University of Texas at Austin): 'On Ethical Subjects and Aesthetic Objects: Simmel's Hegel'.
Susanne Herrmann-Sinai (University of Oxford): 'Can Hegel's Philosophy of Spirit offer a Methodological Blueprint for the Humanities?'
Christopher Newfield (ISRF): 'Submissive Individualism as a Structure of Feeling'.
Louise Braddock (Independent): ‘Dia-gnosis and Dialectic: Freud and Hegel as Each Other's Other?'.
Katie Fleming (QMUL): 'Antigone's Body: Ethics, Embodiment and the Conceptualisation of Consciousness'.
Moral Psychology or Moralised Psychology? Richard Wollheim on 'The Good Self and the Bad Self'; the Moral Psychology of British Idealism and the English School of Psychoanalysis Compared (Saturday 21 January 2023)
Elisa Galgut (University of Cape Town): 'Wollheim's Use of Kleinian Theory as a View of Self-Realization'.
Tom Angier (University of Cape Town): 'Bradley's Wider Purposes'.
Craig Reeves (Birkbeck, University of London): 'Klein's Psychology - Moral, not Moralising'.
Louise Braddock (Independent): 'Binary Selves: The Moralised Psychology of British Idealism Reveal'd'.
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