"Guernica" by Picasso at MOMA, NYC. Gotfryd, Bernard, photographer. Courtesy Library of Congress.
What happens when our basic trust in the world is challenged, and the social dimension of reality is disrupted as a consequence of collective trauma?
In this episode, Werner Bohleber addresses the theme of traumatic experiences and does so starting from the two main models around which psychoanalytic thought has sought to understand trauma: the freudian psycho-economic model and the object-relational model.
Reflecting on what he so effectively defines as "the symbolic web that carries us", Bohleber considers the implications of man-made disasters, and those that befall our individual and collective memory.
Werner Bohleber, Dr. phil, is a psychoanalyst in private practice in Frankfurt am Main. He is training analyst and former President of the German Psychoanalytical Association. He has long served on committees of the IPA, the last from 2009-2013 as Chair of the IPA Committee on Conceptual Integration. From 1997 to 2017 he was main editor of the journal PSYCHE. His research subjects and main publication themes are: late adolescence and young adulthood; psychoanalytic theory; transgenerational consequences of the Nazi period and the war on the second and third generation; nationalism, terrorism, anti-Semitism; trauma research. In 2007, he was awarded the Mary S. Sigourney Award for his diverse contributions, especially those relating to the traumatic aftermath of the Holocaust, National Socialism, and World War II.
link to the paper https://docs.google.com/document/d/18yMyiZ6darmN6ouxVoQmUwlci44UCnCQ/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=112457875385152358388&rtpof=true&sd=true
this episode is available also in German
Bibliography
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van der Kolk B. (2014): The body keeps the score. Mind, brain, and the body in the healing of trauma London: Penguin Books.
CREDITS
Editing: Agustín Ruiz Brussain
Ludovica Grassi - Music, Silence and Psychoanalysis
Christophe Dejours - Sublimation between Suffering and Pleasure at Work
Nancy Chodorow - “Thoughts for the times on women and men”.
Rui Aragão Oliveira - Why pleasure?
Paulina Zukerman: “Couples and Families: A Psychoanalytic Perspective on Money Issues”.
Jack Drescher - Attending To Sexual Compulsivity in a Gay Man.
José Eduardo Fischbein - “The Body in The Psychoanalytic Session”.
Patricia O‘Donnell: “Of Flies and Spiders - Gradiva and Louise Bourgeois”.
Vera Lamanno Adamo - The Psychoanalyst, The Filmmaker And The Art Of Sculpting Time.
Marion M. Oliner - Psychoanalytic Studies on Dysphoria: The False Accord in the Divine Symphony.
Florence Guignard - The Infantile in Psychoanalytic Practice Today.
Christine Anzieu Premmereur - On the Construction of Auto Eroticism.
Craig San Roque - Mourning Melancholia and The Echo Effect
Laura Colombi - The Dangerous Call Of The Wild. Clinical Considerations About Dissociation Into Fantasy.
Katy Bogliatto - Experiences of caesura in Medically Assisted Reproduction.
Manuela Utrilla Robles - Convulsions in Psychoanalytical Institutions.
Panel: "The Inner Child And The Analytical Session".
Mark Solms - The Hidden Spring.
Angelika Staehle - Meetings of Societies on Education.
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