In Spite of Everything: Two Psychoanalysts Talk about Israel-Palestine

Speaking of Home: An Intimate Exchange on Israel-Palestine, 2024, documentary, 61 min, produced by ROOM: A Sketchbook for Analytic Action

reviewed by Naama Rotem

The film Speaking of Home: An Intimate Exchange on Israel-Palestine was produced by the magazine ROOM: A Sketchbook for Analytic Action (and can be streamed, free-of-charge, at ROOM’s Web site: https://analytic-room.com/speakingofhome/). The name of the magazine “speaks” to the fundamental premise of both the magazine and the film: that psychoanalysis has social and political importance and holds the potential for action and change. This often controversial premise is expressed in the film’s unique encounter between two psychoanalysts—one Israeli and one Palestinian—on the Israel-Palestine conflict.

Their 60-minute filmed dialogue makes clear that Palestinian analyst Karim Dajani and Israeli analyst Eyal Rozmarin both believe in the political potential of psychoanalytic dialogue. In their analytically-informed exchange, they seek both to understand and to undo various aspects of their respective experiences of political subjectivation. That is, their hope is mutually to reshape one another’s unconscious as well as conscious experiences and to inspire others to question the ethics of their own relation to collective national and ideological identities and to face more the intergenerational traumas that inform them.

Their belief in the ability of psychoanalysis to contribute to—and even take a lead in—social change is not universally shared. Many continue to insist that psychoanalysis should be concerned only, or chiefly, with intrapsychic and interpersonal experiences. Others who are more critical of psychoanalysis argue that it was and remains a coercive form of treatment, intended to make “maladaptive” patients adapt themselves to prevailing (essentially “bourgeois”) sociopolitical norms. According to the latter view, psychoanalysis is a conservative science that shapes the individual for the sake of society, not vice-versa. The opposing view, expressed in the film, regards psychoanalysis as a discipline that can indirectly affect social change—not least, by exploring the unconscious processes that promote conformity, aggressivity, and various defensive mechanisms including repression, splitting, projective identification, and identification with the aggressor.

 
As part of Dajani and Rozmarin’s public correspondence, Dajani writes, in a letter dated June 2024:

I am convinced that psychoanalysis has great potential to heal individuals and to address trenchant social problems. Ideally, the two go together. (“Learning” 2024, 33)

Rozmarin points out that Freud himself shared a version of this view. He cites several of Freud’s post-World War I essays, in which he addresses problems of society and civilization. In his letter dated January 2024, Rozmarin refers to the power of psychoanalysis to understand not only the individual but also human society:

As the psychoanalysts we are, I believe it is our task to revive our original ambition, to strive, from our angle, to understand the human condition, which also means human society. (“Crossing” 2024, 17)

Their epistolary exchange, like their filmed dialogue, makes clear that psychoanalysis is capable not only of understanding or treating individuals, but also of affecting real-world conditions and of motivating and facilitating sociopolitical change.

As such, I think this film has the potential to be very useful for undergraduate students of psychoanalysis. It clearly demonstrates the potential inherent in this discipline for understanding the relationship between the individual and the society in which they live. Even more importantly, it demonstrates the freedom that is important to have regarding the application of this understanding and the theoretical discourse to everyday life and to contemporary political and social affairs.

Dajani describes this dialogue between two psychoanalysts as a “process of mutual analysis” (26:05), and it proceeds with a kind of radical honesty and genuine concern for the other as they seek to overcome, to whatever extent they can, the unconscious as well as conscious obstacles that continue to make it difficult and often painful for them to regard one another as partners in a shared endeavor.

From my own perspective, the film is not without its flaws: although both Dajani and Rozmarin fully acknowledge the atrocities committed by Israel and the absolute power it has over the Palestinian people, they nevertheless sometimes speak as if they were comparable forces in conflict. Both—perhaps inevitably—seem to have some blind spots. For example, their implied comparison of the Nakba and the Holocaust sometimes seems to forget the disparities between them, as well as the fact that one of these events was inflicted by one side of the conflict upon the other.

I was also given pause by some of Rozmarin’s remarks about the exploitation of both Israelis and Palestinians by the rest of the world. At one point, for instance, he says:

We are alone, we are either exploited or used for the geopolitics of it… Israel is just exploited with arms and money and the Palestinians in different ways. (48:15)

Here, Rozmarin wants to see Israel and Palestine as though they were partners—members of a kind of collective, who must work through their problems together. It’s as if he forgets, temporarily, that Israel has the support of much of the rest of the world in its oppression of the Palestinian people. But the political “exploitation” of Israel is nothing like the death and destruction visited upon Palestine and Palestinians by an Israeli army that is supplied by the rest of the world with vast amounts of money and arms. While I understand Rozmarin implication that the Israel-Palestine conflict is cynically manipulated by more powerful geopolitical actors, he seems to exaggerate Israel’s victimization and to downplay its oppressive power.

Nevertheless, the film succeeds in making me want to look beyond these possible blind-spots and points of contention in order to consider both speakers’ broader intentions. The very act of dialogue—the sincere attempt to understand the other’s thoughts and feelings—is, of course, courageous. However, in a political situation that is not a war between two equal sides but a military occupation of one by the other, it is worth asking what the premises and goals of such a dialogue are, and to question whether this dialogue unwittingly creates a false sense of balance between the sides.

Given the atrocities Israel continues to perpetrate, it’s difficult to think about the merits of “dialogue,” or about the trauma of the oppressor, or about the nuances of the Israeli psyche. But Dajani and Rozmarin do not pretend to speak as representatives of their respective nationalities. They speak as individuals, who also happen to belong to opposing sides of an appalling conflict. They are modeling an interpersonal—not international—dialogue, and they are asking their audience to listen carefully and with compassion to both an Israeli voice and a Palestinian voice. Doing so doesn’t mean justifying either side’s actions or abnegating their responsibilities. Indeed, they pursue dialogue as one such responsibility—as a humane and even radical choice.

 
Their dialogue also poses a challenge to the rigidity of strident identity politics, whether identity is thought of in national, ethnic, gendered, sexual, or religious terms. The film challenges identity politics by seeking similarities as well as differences. While belonging to different identity groups and acknowledging the personal importance to each of them of this form of belonging, Dajani and Rozmarin attend closely to the complex psychic structures of identity and (dis)identification.

Also crucially, Dajani and Rozmarin explore ways in which their political interests might be aligned and new identities configured, based on their shared desire for peace and for the well-being of both peoples. As Rozmarin puts it: “We are the collective….We do not belong in different groups—this is the group” (32:20).

The very willingness of Dajani and Rozmarin to speak together so openly and publicly is a challenge to identity-politics-as-usual. Moreover, their psychoanalytic perspective sheds much-needed light on the ways in which social forces shape our unconscious as well as conscious thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. It illuminates a way beyond the unthought and the unthinking. Toward the end of the film Dajani points out that “what I am doing here is engaging in an act of freedom” (47:12). And indeed, Dajani and Rozmarin demonstrate that psychoanalytic discourse is a discourse of liberation—one that helps people to free themselves from both the seen and unseen forces acting on them and to reformulate their sense of being and belonging.

Although initially, in approaching this film, I was inclined toward suspicion and skepticism, I ultimately found the decision of an Israeli and a Palestinian to engage openly in a psychoanalytic dialogue to be radical and courageous—as well as hopeful. Yet it would be an exaggeration to say that the hope it inspires is entirely durable and lasting. As I write this, almost a year after Dajani and Rozmarin’s filmed conversation, the atrocities committed in Gaza by the state of Israel have only intensified. While watching the film, I was immersed in the idea of possibility. Briefly, I felt as if a humane future was being forecast simply by two individuals speaking to each other out of a sincere and mutual desire for the good of the other. However, as soon as the film ended and I looked at my phone, the ongoing reality hit me, and the horrors being perpetrated, as it were, in my name reminded me of the almost infinite way we still have to go on our way to this future. I tried to hold on to the hope this film proffers, but could also feel it slipping away like desert sand through my fingers.

 

Works cited

Dajani, Karim, and Eyal Rozmarin. 2024. “Crossing Divides.” Room: A Sketchbook for Analytic Action 2.24: 10-17.

Dajani, Karim, and Eyal Rozmarin. 2024. “Learning From All Things.” Room: A Sketchbook for Analytic Action 6.24: 34-39.

New book: Psychoanalysis and the University

Dear Psyche on Campus subscribers and other readers of the blog,

I’m very pleased to announce the publication of my new book, Psychoanalysis and the University: Resistance and Renewal from Freud to the Present, which will be officially released later this month by Routledge Press. I hope that readers of all kinds—including psychoanalytic clinicians and thinkers, university teachers and administrators, and undergraduates and graduate students—will be interested in what it has to say.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As readers of this blog know, psychoanalysis gives us our most complete and nuanced account of what it means to be human—including what it means to create and transmit knowledge from one person and one generation to the next. Psychoanalysis and the University charts the past and present vicissitudes of the relation between psychoanalysis and education, emphasizing the urgent contemporary need for colleges and universities to expand and enhance the place of psychoanalysis in both their curricula and their campus healthcare settings.

The relation between psychoanalysis and the university has always been characterized by various forms of resistance and renewal—perpetuating and, in recent decades especially, exacerbating the challenges faced by educators and clinicians who hope to expand the place of psychoanalysis in higher education. As I argue in the book’s Introduction, the precariousness of both psychoanalysis and the university makes this a particularly auspicious moment for overcoming mutual resistances, and one aim of Psychoanalysis and the University is to suggest ways in which their respective prospects for survival could be reciprocally enhanced. In my view, twenty-first-century universities need to do more to recognize their essential role in communicating the importance of psychoanalysis for understanding intrapsychic and psychosocial phenomena both within and beyond the classroom, just as the field of psychoanalysis needs to reassert its necessity, not only as a mode of treatment but also as the richest theoretical account of our subjectivation and intersubjectivity. My book’s most fundamental argument is that the perpetual marginalization of psychoanalysis in higher education is about much more than the suppression (by academic psychology, most notably) of a single field of knowledge—that it in fact amounts to a defensive refutation of the determinations of unconscious experience in all aspects of human affairs.

While Psychoanalysis and the University is addressed primarily to readers in the US, the UK, and other English-speaking countries, the systems of higher education in numerous non-anglophone countries, as well, share many of the same challenges and opportunities—thanks not least to the long, circumglobal history of the relation between psychoanalysis and education, as Chapter 1 demonstrates.

Following that broad historical overview, Chapter 2 (“Psychoanalysis and the Curriculum”) describes and evaluates psychoanalytic content in higher education over the past several decades. Where and how is psychoanalysis being taught in our colleges and universities? What sorts of departments and programs most often tend to include psychoanalytic content in their courses, and of what does that content consist? Who are the principal psychoanalytic thinkers students are asked to read? What would an expansion of psychoanalytic curricula look like from the perspective of different areas of study, and how might such enhancements be implemented and justified in light of the crises we now face?

Chapter 3 (“Psychoanalysis Among the Disciplines”) considers the ways in which universities “discipline” knowledge and whether psychoanalysis itself is—or should be—treated as a distinct discipline, with its own institutional infrastructure. Where do psychoanalytic studies already have such an infrastructure, and how are these programs faring, both at the undergraduate and graduate levels? Is psychoanalysis inherently interdisciplinary, and, if so, with how many different disciplines does it—or could it—interact? To what extent—and in what sense—is psychoanalytic research empirical? And how does it balance the empirical and the theoretical or speculative? What are the descriptive, heuristic, and epistemological roles played by psychoanalysis in different areas of research and teaching? And how might the enhancement of psychoanalytic education help mitigate or even reverse the effects of increasing standardization, accountability metrics, and other forms of naïve empiricism regarding the assessment of instructional quality and learning outcomes?

Scenes of instruction and learning are the particular focus of Chapter 4 (“Psychoanalysis and Pedagogy”), which describes and evaluates the activities of teaching and learning from a psychoanalytic perspective. How might the individual experiences of teachers and students, as well as the collective experience of the classroom group, be better understood in psychodynamic terms? How might such experiences be even better facilitated by actively incorporating certain psychoanalytic concepts and techniques into existing pedagogical practices? Of primary significance to such questions are the mutually informing phenomena of transference and countertransference—the often powerful emotional currents that flow, unconsciously, between teachers and students, as well as between students themselves, in classrooms, office-hours, labs, and other educational settings. What are the advantages as well as the dangers of the emotional attachments, erotic feelings and fantasies, and forms of mistrust, love, anger, emulation, and jealousy that tend to remain unavowed and therefore unaddressed in the pedagogical situation? The pursuit of knowledge itself has its own affective dimensions that tend not to be openly discussed as part of the learning process. But what if they were? How might psychoanalysis help teachers and students make better use of their “passion” (or “hatred” or “boredom,” etc.) for a particular object of study or entire field of inquiry?

The considerable cost—in time as well as money—of both psychoanalytic treatment and higher education prompts the very reasonable question: “Are they worth it?” Will either one make life better? Would an enhanced relation between the two yield further, unanticipated advantages? Chapter 5 (“Psychoanalysis, the University, and the Professions”) addresses these questions of value with respect to both psychological well-being and professional achievement, suggesting ways in which higher education could better prepare students for a variety of careers by augmenting the curricular and pedagogical roles of psychoanalysis on campus. It describes various post-graduate possibilities for students of psychoanalysis and explains how advantageous a psychoanalytically informed education can be in the pursuit and development of many different sorts of professions and careers. This chapter also addresses the often conflicting claims of metapsychological theory and caregiving practice in psychoanalytic training, while also considering how psychoanalysis could enhance the university’s own pastoral role—not only by improving the quality of campus-based mental healthcare, but also by developing the capacities of all students for compassionate self-understanding and ethical relations with others.

Finally, the book’s Appendix offers some further practical information for educators, including: a database of syllabi from various courses taught by academics and clinicians in a multitude of fields; information about professional psychoanalytic organizations with demonstrated interest in psychoanalytic education; and a supplemental list of sources not already cited in the Bibliography.

Psychoanalysis and the University is being published as part of the Routledge series, “Psychoanalysis in a New Key,” under the general editorship of Donnel Stern, and I’m deeply grateful to Don for giving my book such a wonderful home.

I’m also tremendously grateful to Jack Drescher, Sander Gilman, Lynne Layton, Emma Lieber, Andrew Solomon, and Eli Zaretsky, who were among the book’s first readers. Here is what each of them has to say about it:

“Can psychoanalysis ever be part of modern university curricula in ways other academic disciplines take for granted? According to Max Cavitch, psychoanalysis is inseparable from all university activities, even when not recognized as a distinct discipline. Neither activity, psychoanalysis nor higher education, is merely about transmitting facts; both rely upon the power of relationships to impart knowledge to students and teachers alike. So what, to paraphrase D. W. Winnicott, might a “pedagogical holding environment” look like? After presenting a detailed history of psychoanalytic pedagogy since Freud, Psychoanalysis and the University offers educators and psychoanalytically-oriented clinicians some thoughtful suggestions to answer that question.”
Jack Drescher, M.D., training and supervising analyst, William Alanson White Institute

“Must we now have a psychoanalysis ‘in ruins’ for a university ‘in ruins’? Max Cavitch makes a compelling argument that now is the moment to rethink what has long been a conflict about where and who should be involved in the training of psychoanalysts and how such training can begin to reshape the very notion of an academic pedagogy within professional as well as liberal arts settings. The right book for the right moment.”
Sander L. Gilman, distinguished professor emeritus of the Liberal Arts and Sciences and professor of psychiatry emeritus, Emory University

“Max Cavitch is the champion psychoanalysis needs to break down barriers between psychoanalytic institutes and the university. Critiquing the utilitarian trend of knowledge acquisition in the contemporary neoliberal university, Cavitch argues that the university’s disavowal of the unconscious is one clear key to its impoverished state. His psychoanalytic sensibility widens our very understandings of what knowledge is and what it is for. Cavitch makes a compelling case for how, in his words, teaching with rather than about psychoanalysis can powerfully transform any classroom, no matter the discipline.”
Lynne Layton, psychoanalyst; assistant clinical professor of psychology, Harvard Medical School; author of Toward a Social Psychoanalysis: Culture, Character, and Normative Unconscious Processes

“This book will be essential for anyone invested in the histories and futures of both education and psychoanalysis (which, to my mind, should be all of us). Fluidly weaving historical and contemporary sources on the complex, fraught, and fertile relationship between psychoanalysis and teaching, Cavitch’s account not only provides a lucid overview of the inter-implication of the two fields, but also offers an intervention on current thinking about the production and uses of knowledge. As the twenty-first century university finds itself in crisis; as new generations of students work to change our cultural relationship to questions of authority, identity, responsibility, and truth; and as psychoanalysis has reemerged on the contemporary scene in conversation with these shifts, this book should serve as an orienting point as we re-think what it means to learn how to live.”
Emma Lieber, psychoanalyst; part-time assistant professor of literary studies, Eugene Lang College, The New School; author of The Writing Cure and editor of The Queerness of Childhood: Essays from the Other Side of the Looking Glass

“In an era when psychoanalysis has been systematically devalued, Max Cavitch’s book comes as a revelation: that psychoanalysis is a tool not only for understanding the inner lives of individual subjects, but also for understanding our relationship to the outside world and its nuances. Within universities, psychoanalysis has been attacked as too obscure usefully to inform teaching, criticism, humanism. Yet this apparent uselessness is the very point: that insight has inherent value even when it does not have implications, and that in losing track of that notion, we lose track of education itself. Written from the standpoint of profound knowledge, deep experience, and meticulous research, this book stands as a persuasive defense of psychoanalysis in pedagogy, and establishes that the stripping away of psychoanalytic principles from university curricula has been a regressive step reflective of our yearning for simplicity in the face of an ever more complex reality. Cavitch ultimately proves that this represents not an escalation into clarity, but a descent into sophistry and chaos, a failure of education to understand or prepare students for the intricate convolutions of the world they constitute or the one they will inhabit.”
Andrew Solomon, professor of clinical psychology, Columbia University Medical Center; lecturer in psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine; author of Far from the Tree: Parents, Children, and the Search for Identity and The Noonday Demon: An Atlas of Depression

“In its early years, psychoanalysis benefited from being excluded from a restrictive and conservative university culture. Today, the university has become open to many forms of thought, but at the same time it is in a crisis of its own. Max Cavitch brings these two histories together, with unexpected and illuminating consequences.”
Eli Zaretsky, professor of history, New School for Social Research, author of Secrets of the Soul: A Social and Cultural history of Psychoanalysis

The book’s “ship date” is April 23, but orders for both print and electronic copies can already be placed at the Routledge Web site where, during the month of April, there is a 20% discount:

And from April 1 until September 30, use this discount code for the same discount:


 
Psychoanalysis and the University is also available at Amazon.
 

Max Cavitch, Ph.D., is Associate Professor of English and Co-director of Psychoanalytic Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, where he also edits the APsA award-winning blog, Psyche on Campus. He is the author of American Elegy: The Poetry of Mourning from the Puritans to Whitman (University of Minnesota Press, 2007), Psychoanalysis and the University: Resistance and Renewal from Freud to the Present (Routledge, 2025), and Ashes: A History of Thought and Substance (forthcoming from Punctum Books). He is also the editor of Walt Whitman’s Specimen Days (Oxford University Press, 2023), co-editor (with Brian Connolly) of Situation Critical! Critique, Theory, and Early American Studies (Duke University Press, 2024), and co-translator (with Noura Wedell and Paul Grant) of Jean Louis Schefer’s The Ordinary Man of Cinema [L’Homme ordinaire du cinema] (MIT Press, 2016). Currently, he is the Fulbright-Freud Visiting Lecturer of Psychoanalysis at the Sigmund Freud Museum and the University of Vienna, where he is completing his next book, Fido and Psyche: Dogs In and Around Psychoanalysis, 1871 to the Present: An Illustrated History.

 

Attacks on Student Activism: A Psychoanalytic Perspective

by Jyoti M. Rao

International experts have concluded that recent crackdowns on campus protests have created “a widespread hostile environment for the exercise of the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and association” and recommended that universities find ways to respect and support their students. Still, student activists and their allies have seen escalating disciplinary actions taken against them for speaking out against the horrific human rights violations in Gaza as a result of military bombardment substantially underwritten by the U.S. government. These actions against students have included extensive surveillance, involvement of armed law enforcement, suspensions, threats to employment, and declarations of tenured faculty as personae non gratae for participating in protests. In the early months of 2025, escalation of this hostility has included withdrawal of federal funding from universities at which protests took place and an executive order targeting students and casting their political activity in propagandistic terms.

Continue reading “Attacks on Student Activism: A Psychoanalytic Perspective”

Psychoanalytic Listening as an Undergraduate Student Nurse

by Liesl Dentinger

In my third year of undergraduate nursing school, I was assigned to an inpatient women’s trauma unit in a freestanding psychiatric hospital for a clinical rotation. The goal of this clinical experience was to engage in therapeutic communication with patients, a skillset very different from the physical assessments and medication administrations I learned in other rotations. What prepared me best for these patient encounters was not my previous nursing classes or clinical experience but rather the ability to listen in ways I developed while studying psychoanalytic theory in some non-nursing courses.

Continue reading “Psychoanalytic Listening as an Undergraduate Student Nurse”

Reflections from the BA in Psychosocial and Psychoanalytic Studies at the University of Essex

by Marita Vyrgioti

Psychoanalysis has always had a closer relationship with the psychosocial than commonly acknowledged. Many of Freud’s own writings explicitly engage with issues such as religion, war, sexuality, and the pitfalls of sociality. And social themes abound in various iterations of post-Freudian psychoanalytic thought. By emphasizing the struggle between destructiveness and the propensity for love and reparation, Melanie Klein offered an account of human subjectivity that is both psychological and sociological. And D. W. Winnicott discussed democracy in relation to both the family and the larger society. Historians and psychosocial theorists have appraised Klein’s and Winnicott’s contributions to the formation of social democracy in Britain during the modern era. Indeed, from the beginning, psychoanalysis has been frequently engaged with the sociopolitical world.

Yet certain tensions between the intrapsychic and the psychosocial have also increased over time. Few psychoanalysts enter the public sphere directly to engage with social issues. For the most part, their interventions are applications of psychoanalytic models to social phenomena. Many analysts are still reluctant to consider closely the implications of war, neoliberalism, violence against women, colonialism, racism and racial oppression, climate destruction, and technological determinism in theorizing the psychoanalytic subject.

Continue reading “Reflections from the BA in Psychosocial and Psychoanalytic Studies at the University of Essex”

Special announcement of a film-release: “Speaking of Home: An Intimate Exchange on Israel-Palestine”

The following press release comes to us from our friends at ROOM: A Sketchbook for Analytic Action and will be of special interest to readers of Psyche on Campus. This hour-long film–free to view at ROOM‘s Web site–captures an extraordinarily moving and exigent dialogue between two psychoanalysts: one Palestinian and one Israeli.

Continue reading “Special announcement of a film-release: “Speaking of Home: An Intimate Exchange on Israel-Palestine””

Does AI Squander the Magic of Making Comics in the Classroom? A Psychoanalytic Perspective

by Vera J. Camden and Valentino L. Zullo

At a recent American literature conference, a creative writing professor told us he was using comics in his classroom. As two English professors who have taught comics for many years, we were intrigued and asked him, how? He explained that his students used generative AI to create images paired with typed text. We demurred and asked what the point was of making AI-comics in the classroom when for us, creating comics has always been about reconstituting the mind/body connection and about using one’s hands (our first tools) as a “way of thinking” (Chute 2019, 629). Our colleague’s response was: “Hey, this isn’t an art class!” It seemed clear that, for him, hand-drawing was for children, maybe for artists, but that for “critical-thinking” adults AI was the way to go.

We beg to differ and hope here to explain why! We contend that writing and drawing by hand is a human privilege and that, akin to psychoanalysis, it can be an invitation to self-reflection. We dread the prospect of a world in which generative AI turns the work of making into something done for us, and not by us. Whatever pedagogical applications AI may eventually have, no technology should alienate students from their embodied creative capacities, beginning with the use of their hands.

Continue reading “Does AI Squander the Magic of Making Comics in the Classroom? A Psychoanalytic Perspective”

The Disavowal of Psychohistory and the Teaching of History

by Brian Connolly

The relationship between history and psychoanalysis has always been a bit vexed. Joan W. Scott has written of the “incommensurability of history and psychoanalysis,” which “provides the ground for continued conversation and debate about the possibilities, and also the limits, of a collaboration between the different temporalities of psychoanalysis and history” (2012, 82). If there is a trajectory of possibilities and limits that might propel critical historical thinking, there are also dangers. Michel de Certeau, himself one of the great practitioners of a psychoanalytic history, put it this way:

Since these Freudian “concepts” are supposed to explain all human endeavor, we have little difficulty driving them into the most obscure regions of history. Unfortunately, they are nothing other than decorative tools if their only goal amounts to a designation or discreet obfuscation of what the historian does not understand (1988, 288-89).

Another advocate of a psychoanalytically inflected history was less circumspect. “My plea for history as an elegant, fairly rigorous aesthetic science,” Peter Gay wrote in Freud for Historians,

was powerfully assisted by my commitment to psychology, in particular to psychoanalysis. I saw it then, and see it even more now, as a rewarding auxiliary discipline that the historical profession has so far inadequately trusted, and certainly far from mastered. The much canvassed disasters of psychohistory, on which its detractors have fastened with a kind of unholy glee, are ground for caution rather than despair—or for disdain (1985, ix-x).

Taking these cautions seriously, we might still ask, what was/is psychohistory? What has the discipline of history lost by effectively disavowing it? And what might this mean today for the teaching of history in the United States (and elsewhere), as the university itself crumbles?

Continue reading “The Disavowal of Psychohistory and the Teaching of History”

Teaching Psychoanalysis as a Manual for Living

by Harold Braswell

For most of my career, I kept my interest in psychoanalysis largely separate from my work as a professor of bioethics. I was nervous that colleagues and students would find psychoanalysis weird and retrograde, and I had other interests that were more readily accepted.

But in summer 2020 I earned tenure, which gave me a high enough degree of job security to allay my fears. Also, shortly after that, my father died. I had a lot of regrets about our relationship, and these regrets made me feel an urgent need to stop holding back in life and to live as I wanted. I entered personal analysis and decided to pursue clinical training, which meant first earning a degree in social work and then becoming a clinical candidate at my local psychoanalytic institute. These experiences dramatically enhanced my understanding of the transformative impact of psychoanalysis on my own life, and its potential to better the lives of others.

Then, in fall 2022, my university, Saint Louis University, launched a new undergraduate Core Curriculum, which required all incoming students to take one of its new “Ignite Seminars.” These seminars could be on any almost any topic, provided that the instructor was passionate about it—passion which, it was hoped, would “ignite” the minds of students just embarking on their education.

Continue reading “Teaching Psychoanalysis as a Manual for Living”

Dear Psyche on Campus subscribers and other readers,

Psyche on Campus has been on hiatus for a few months while I’ve been finishing a new book, Psychoanalysis and the University: Resistance and Renewal from Freud to the Present, which will be published by Routledge in 2025. (More about that as the publication date approaches.) The blog is getting back up to speed with some terrific posts lined up for publication soon.

Meanwhile, here are four timely announcements sure to be of interest to many of you:

First up, on June 2 (that’s this coming Sunday!)

Consider tuning in to the free, online conference on “Psychodynamic Psychology in Academia: A Call to Action.” The panels and discussions will take place between 11:00am and 2:15pm (EST). To register (again, it’s free to all!), visit https://forms.gle/yXqoxFGAECcFh75MA.

Calling all undergraduate writers and their instructors!

Submissions are due by September 30, 2024, for the American Psychoanalytic Association’s annual Undergraduate Essay Prize. This $500 prize will be awarded to an undergraduate essay which engages psychoanalytic ideas in relation to a focused question, in any academic discipline. Essays must be submitted by the instructor (just one submission per instructor, please). For complete details and submission instructions, visit https://apsa.org/fellowships-awards/undergraduate-essay-prize/.

Scholars and clinician writers take note!

The journal Re:visit~ Humanities & Medicine in Dialogue is now accepting article submissions of 6,000-8,000 words—in either English or German—for its next open section issue. The submission deadline is November 30, 2024. Re:visit publishes critical and (self-)reflexive writing about concepts and questions that place medicine (including mental health and mental healthcare policy) and the humanities in dialogue with one another. Theoretical, historical, and clinical/empirical approaches are all welcome. For complete details and submission instructions, (re)visit https://journal-revisit.org/jr/index.

Calling all readers!

If you’re a reader of Psyche on Campus then you almost certainly have something to say about psychoanalysis and undergraduate education, whether as a teacher, student, clinician, or administrator—maybe something you’d like to share? Psyche on Campus is especially eager to hear from those of you who are psychoanalytic training institute affiliates, candidates, faculty, and/or administrators, as well as from clinicians in private practice and those of you who are active in APsA, Division 39, IPA, etc. What are your views on the importance of teaching psychoanalysis at the undergraduate level? How important to you is it that new generations of college students have more and better opportunities to learn about psychoanalysis? What sorts of benefits might result from expanding the scope of undergraduate psychoanalytic education? What about the possibility of independent analytic institutes joining forces with universities? Any and all points of view are welcome. Send your short (800-1200 words) post or pitch your idea to me at cavitch@upenn.edu.