Resources

Papers & Publications

The following compilation of references authored by LAISPS Members includes journal articles, book chapters, newspaper articles, and books on psychoanalysis and/or the application of psychoanalytic theory to other domains of clinical practice, training, and interdisciplinary study.

Resources can be viewed at pep-web.org, but please note that a membership subscription is required to access full articles.

  • Atkins, R. (1989). The fate of the father-representation in adolescent sons. Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis, 17, 271-291.

    Atkins, R. (1989). Divorce and fathers: Some intrapsychic factors affecting outcome. In S. H. Cath, A. Gurwitt, &  L. Gunsberg (Eds.), Fathers and their families (pp. 431-458).  Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press.

    Atkins, R. (1987). The origins of masochism: Current issues in development. Integrative Psychiatry, 5, 49-52.

    Atkins, R. (1986). Single mothers and joint custody: Common ground. In M. Yogman & T. B. Brazelton (Eds.),  In support of families (pp. 69-88). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

    Atkins, R. (1986). Pathological preoccupation: Psychosexual issues. International Journal of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, 11, 427-433.

    Atkins, R., & Lansky, M. (1986). The father in family therapy: Psychoanalytic perspectives. In Charles M. Lamb (Ed.), The father’s role: Applied perspectives (pp. 167-190). New York: Harvard University Press.

    Atkins, R. (1985). Pathological preoccupation: Some comments. International Journal of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, 11, 132-135.

    Atkins, R. (1984). Transitive vitalization and its impact on father representation. Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 20, 663-675.

    Atkins, R. (1984). Is a marriage between psychoanalysis and family therapy ecologically sound? Some reflections. In A. E. Christ & K. Flomenhaft (Eds.), Children with cancer (pp. 149-159).  New York: Praeger.

    Atkins, R. (1983). Peer relatedness in the first year of life: The birth of a new world. The Annual of Psychoanalysis, 11, 227-244.

    Atkins, R. (1982). Discovering daddy: The mother’s role. In S.H. Cath, A. Gurwitt, & J. M. Ross (Eds.), Father and child (pp. 139-149). Boston: Little, Brown Publishing.

    Atkins, R. (1981). Finding one’s father: A mother’s contribution to early father representations. Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis, 9, 539-559.

    Atkins, R. (1980). Training issues faced by psychoanalysis and family therapy. In K. Flomenhaft & A. E. Christ (Eds.), The challenge of family therapy (pp. 191-195). New York: Praeger.

    Atkins, R. (1977). Activity and masochism. Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 13, 233-250.

  • Bolgar, H. (2009). A century of essential feminism. Studies in Gender and Sexuality, 10, 195-199.

    Bolgar, H. (2002). When the glass is full. Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 22, 640-651.

  • Chassler, L. (1994). In hunger I am king – Understanding anorexia nervosa from a psychoanalytic perspective: Theoretical and clinical implications. Clinical Social Work, 22, 397-415.

  • Christian, C., & Diamond, M. J. (2011). A brief history of therapeutic action: Convergence, divergence, and integrative bridges. In M. J. Diamond and C. Christian (Eds.), The second century of psychoanalysis: Evolving perspectives on therapeutic action (pp. 3-19). London: Karnac.

    Christian, C. (2011). From ego psychology to modern conflict theory. In M. J. Diamond and C. Christian (Eds.), The second century of psychoanalysis: Evolving perspectives on therapeutic action (pp. 97-120). London: Karnac.

  • Cohen, D., & Jay, S. (1996). Autistic barriers in the psychoanalysis of borderline adults. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 77, 913-933.

  • Daehnert, C. (2008). Crossing over: A story of surrender and transformation. Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 77, 199-218.

    Daehnert, C. (2016). Kelly Finds A Way. Minneapolis, MN: North Loop Books.

    Daehnert, C. (1998). The false self as a means of misidentification: A psychoanalytic case study. Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 34: 251-271.

  • ​Diamond, M.J. (2020). Masculinity and Its Discontents: The Male Psyche and the Inherent Tensions of Maturing Manhood. New York/London, Routledge, in press.

    Diamond, M.J. (2020).  “Dear Candidate – Letter To A Psychoanalytic Candidate.”  In Busch, F., ed., Dear Candidate, New York/London, Routledge, in press.

    Diamond, M.J. (2020).  The elusiveness of ‘the feminine” in the male analyst: Living in yet not being of the binary.  Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 89: 503-526.

    Diamond, M.J. (2020).  A review of “Changing Notions Of The Feminine: Confronting Psychoanalysts’ Prejudices,” edited by Margarita Cereijido.  International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 101: 230-234,

    Diamond, M.J. (2020).  Treating the traumatized mind: Dissociation and psychoanalytic technique.  In McBride, T., & Murphy, M., eds., Trauma and the Destructive-Transformative Struggle. London: Routledge, pp. 200-212.

    Diamond, M.J. (2020).  Return of the repressed: Dissociation and the psychoanalysis of the traumatized mind.  Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 68: ---.

    Diamond, M.J. (2020).  Encompassing the multitude, animating the contradictions, and building bridges: Reply to commentaries.  Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 68: ---.

    Diamond, M.J. (2019).  Gazing back, playing forward: Contemporary psychoanalytic musings on the relational essence of hypnotherapeutic action.  American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 62: 12-30.

    Diamond, M.J. (2019).  Die Wiederentdeckung des fehlenden, verlorengegangenen Vaters in der psychoanalytischen Dyade (The rediscovery of the missing, lost father in the psychoanalytic dyad). In I. Moeslein-Teising, G Schäfer, & R. Martin, eds., Geschlechter-Spannungen (Gender Tensions).  Gießen Germany: Psychosozial-Verlag Publishing, pp. 151-173.

    Diamond, M.J. (2018).  When fathering fails: Violence, narcissism, and the father function in ancient tales and clinical analysis.  Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 66: 7-40.

    Diamond, M.J. (2017).  The missing father function in psychoanalytic theory and technique: The analyst's internal couple and maturing intimacy.  Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 86: 861-867.

    Diamond, M.J. (2017).  The vibrant challenges of clinically effective psychoanalytic mindedness.  Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 86: 86: 627-643.

    Diamond, M.J. (2017).  Recovering the father in mind and flesh: History, triadic functioning, and developmental implications.  Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 86: 297-334.

    Diamond, M.J. (2017).  The elusiveness of masculinity: Primordial vulnerability, lack, and the challenges of male development. In H-G. Metzger, ed., Männlichkeit, Sexualität, Aggression: Zur Psychoanalyse Männlicher Identität und Vaterschaftt. Berlin: Germany, Psychosozial-Verlag Publishing, pp. 35-90 (German translation of 2015 Psychoanalytic Quarterly paper].

    Diamond, M.J. (2017).  A review of “Growth and Turbulence in the Container/Contained: Bion’s Continuing Legacy,” edited by Howard B. Levine and Lawrence J. Brown. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 98: 245-250.

    Diamond, M.J. (2016).  Commentary on the lecture of Alessandra Lemma (Koreferat zu Alessandra Lemma on “Psychoanalysis in times of technoculture: some reflections on the fate of the body in virtual space”).  Zeitschrift für psychoanalytische Theorie und Praxis, 31: 72-78.

    Diamond, M.J. (2016).  The elusiveness of masculinity: Primordial vulnerability, lack, and the challenges of male development In H-G. Metzger, ed., Männlichkeit, Sexualität, Aggression. Berlin: Germany, Psychosozial Publishing, pp. 35-90 [German translation of 2015 Psychoanalytic Quarterly article].

    Diamond, M.J. (2015).  The elusiveness of masculinity: Primordial vulnerability, lack, and the challenges of male development.  Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 84: 47-102.

    Diamond, M.J. (2014).  Analytic mind use and interpsychic communication: Driving force in analytic technique, pathway to unconscious mental life.  Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 83: 525-563.

    Diamond, M.J. (2013).  Evolving perspectives on masculinity and its discontents: Reworking the internal phallic and genital positions. In E. Palerm Mari, & F. Thomson-Salo, editors, Masculinity and Femininity Today, London: Karnac Books, pp. 1-24.

    Diamond, M.J. (2013). It’s still the same old story: Looking back to the furture in Rangell’s ‘From Insight to Change’ (1981). In B.I. Kalish & C.P. Fisher, editors, The Rangell Reader: Commentaries on and Selected Papers by Leo Rangell, M.D., New York: International Psychoanalytic Books (IP Books), pp. 147-161.

    Diamond, M.J. (2013). A review of “Thirteen Ways of Looking At A Man: Psychoanalysis and Masculinity” by Donald Moss. Psychoanalytic Psychology, 30: 503-508.

    Diamond, M.J. & Christian, C. (2011).  The Second Century of Psychoanalysis: Evolving Perspectives on Therapeutic Action.  London: Karnac Books.

    Diamond, M.J. & C. Christian (2011).  Introduction – Evolving perspectives on therapeutic action: Where are we after a century?  In M.J. Diamond & C. Christian’s (Eds.), The Second Century of Psychoanalysis: Evolving Perspectives on Therapeutic Action. London: Karnac Books, pp. xxi-xxxi.

    Christian, C. & Diamond, M.J. (2011). A brief history of therapeutic action: Convergence, divergence, and integrative bridges. In M.J. Diamond & C. Christian’s (Eds.), The Second Century of Psychoanalysis: Evolving Perspectives on Therapeutic Action.  London: Karnac Books, pp. 3-19.

    Diamond, M.J. (2011).  The impact of the mind of the analyst: From unconscious processes to intrapsychic change.  In M.J. Diamond & C. Christian’s (Eds.), The Second Century of Psychoanalysis: Evolving Perspectives on Therapeutic Action. London: Karnac Books, pp. 205-235.

    Diamond, M.J. (2011).  Rivalry, neglect and desire: A psychoanalytic perspective fathering sons and daughters throughout life [Rivalitat, missachutung und verlangen: Eine psychoanalytische sicht auf die lebenslange väterliche Begleitung von Söhnen und töchtern].  Analytische Kinder-und-Jugendlichen-psychotherapie [Journal for Theory and Practice of Child and Adolescent Psychoanalysis and Psychodynamic Psychotherapy], H. 151: 303-330. [Original article published in German language).

    Diamond, M.J. (2010).  A review of “Building Out into the Dark: Theory and Observation in Science and Psychoanalysis” by Robert Caper. Psychologist-Psychoanalyst, 30: 38-41.

    Diamond, M.J. (2010).  A review of “A Healing Conversation” by Neville Symington. Psychologist-Psychoanalyst, 30: 32-33.

    Diamond, M.J. (2009).  Masculinity and its discontents: Making room for the “mother” inside the male – An essential achievement for healthy male gender identity.  In B. Reis & R. Grossmark’s (Eds.), Heterosexual Masculinities: Contemporary Perspectives from Psychoanalytic Gender Theory.  New York: The Analytic Press, pp. 23-53.

    Diamond, M.J. (2007). My Father Before Me: How Fathers and Sons Influence Each Other ThroughoutTheir Lives.  New York: W.W. Norton and Co.  [Published in German as, Sohne und Vater:     Eine Beziehung im lebenslangen Wandel, Frankfurt:  Brandes & Apsel, 2010; published in Portuguese     as, Tal pai, tal filho: Como pais e filhos influenciam uns aos outros ao longo da vida, Sao Paulo:     Academia de Inteligencia, 2008; and published in Korean (translated) as, I Love My Son, Seoul: Kugil Publishing, 2008].

    Diamond, M.J. (2007).  A review of “Love and Its Vicissitudes” by Andre Green & Gregorio Kohon. Psychologist-Psychoanalyst, 27: 44-45.

    Diamond, M.J. (2006).  Masculinity unraveled: The roots of male gender identity and the shifting of male ego ideals throughout life.  Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 54: 1099-1130.  (Reprinted as Entratselte masculinitat: Die urrsprunge  der mannlichen geschlechtsidentitat und die veranderungen mannlicher ich-ideale im lebenszyklus in German Journal of Theory and Practice of Child and Adolescent Psychoanalysis and Psychodynamic Psychotherapy, 2010, 41: 331-366).

    Diamond, M.J. (2006).  It may look oedipal but …: Reply to Larry Josephs.  The Round Robin (Newsletter of Psychoanalytic Practitioners, Section 1, APA Division 39), Winter 2006, 8-10.

    Diamond, M.J. (2005).  The roots of masculinity: A contemporary psychoanalytic perspective on the initial construction of manhood.  The Round Robin (Newsletter of Psychoanalytic Practitioners, Section 1, APA Division 39), Fall 2005, 1, 10-16.

    Diamond, M.J. (2004).  The shaping of masculinity: Revisioning boys turning away from their mothers to reconstruct male gender identity.  International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 85: 359-380.

    Diamond, M.J. (2004).  Accessing the multitude within: A psychoanalytic perspective the transformation of masculinity at mid-life.  International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 85: 45-64. (Reprinted as, Acceder a la multitude interne: Une perspective psychoanalytique de la transformation du masculine au milieu de la vie, in L’annee psychanalytique internationale, 2005, 3: 37-57).

    Diamond, M.J. (2004).  A review of “Self-Hatred in Psychoanalysis: Detoxifying the Persecutory Object” edited by Jill Savege Scharff & Stanley A. Tsigounis. Psychologist-Psychoanalyst, 24: 66.

    Diamond, M.J. (1998).  Fathers with sons: Psychoanalytic perspectives on “good enough” fathering throughout the life cycle. Gender and Psychoanalysis, 3: 243-299.

    Diamond, M.J. (1997).  Boys to Men: The maturing of masculine gender identity through paternal watchful protectiveness. Gender and Psychoanalysis, 2: 443-468.

    Diamond, M.J. (1997).  The unbearable agony of being: Interpreting tormented states of mind in the psychoanalysis of sexually traumatized patients.  Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, 61: 495-511.

    Diamond, M.J. (1995).  Someone to watch over me: The father as the original protector of the mother-infant dyad.  Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy, 12:89-102.

    Shapiro, J.L., Diamond, M.J., & Greenberg, M. (1995).  Becoming A Father: Social, Developmental, and Clinical Perspectives.  NY: Springer.

    Shapiro, J.L., Diamond, M.J., & Greenberg, M. (1995).  Introduction. In J.L. Shapiro, M.J. Diamond, & M. Greenberg (Eds.) Becoming a Father: Social, Developmental, and Clinical Perspectives.  NY: Springer, pp. 3-14.

    Diamond, M.J. (1995).  The emergence of the father as the watchful protector of the mother-infant dyad. In J.L. Shapiro, M.J. Diamond, & M. Greenberg’s (Eds.), Becoming a Father: Social, Developmental, and Clinical Perspectives.  NY: Springer, pp. 243-252.

    Diamond, M.J. (1994).  A review of “In a Time of Fallen Heroes: The Re-Creation of Masculinity” by William Betcher & William Pollack.  Psychologist-Psychoanalyst, 14: 15-16.

    Diamond, M.J. (1993).  A review of “Fathers Who Fail: Shame and Psychopathology in the Family System” by Melvin R. Lansky.  Psychotherapy, 30: 699-700.

    Diamond, M.J. (1992).  A review of “Interpretation and Interaction: Psychoanalysis or Psychotherapy?” by Jerome D. Oremland.  Psychotherapy, 29: 509.

    Diamond, M.J. (1991).  A review of “The Empathic Imagination” by Alfred Margulies.  American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 33: 192-194.

    Diamond, M.J. (1990).  A review of “A Secure Base” by John Bowlby.  Psychotherapy, 27: 661-662.

    Diamond, M.J. (1989).  Stagnation, chaos, and severe character neuroses.  Psychoanalytic Psychology, 6: 455-473.

    Diamond, M.J. (1988).  Accessing archaic involvement: Toward unraveling the mystery of Erickson’s hypnosis.  International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 36: 141-156.

    Diamond, M.J. (1987).  The interactional basis of hypnotic experience: On the relational dimensions of hypnosis. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 35: 95-115.  (Reprinted in Imagination, 1993, 2: 5-32).

    Diamond, M.J. (1986).  Becoming a father: A psychoanalytic perspective on the forgotten parent.  The Psychoanalytic Review, 73: 445-468.  Reprinted in R.M. Friedman & L. Lerner’s, Eds., Toward a New Psychology of Men: Psychoanalytic and Social Perspectives, NY: Guilford Press, 1987; and in J.L. Shapiro, M.J. Diamond, & M. Greenberg, Eds., Becoming a Father: Social, Developmental, and Clinical Perspectives, NY: Springer, 1995, pp. 268-285.

    Diamond, M.J. (1985).  When the knight regains his armor: An indirect psychodynamically-based brief hypnotherapy of an ego-dystonic sexual impulse disorder.  In E.T. Dowd & J.M. Healy Eds., Case Studies in Hypnotherapy, NY: Guilford Press, pp. 71-82. ​

  • Dirham, P. (2019).The Trauma of Otherness and the struggle for connection: Schizoid and sadomasochistic defenses against contact with the Other in Trauma and the Destructive-Transformative Struggle: Clinical Perspectives, ( 2019). Eds. :Terrence McBride Maureen MurphyRutledge

  • Donovan, K. (1995). Sally: Recovery of our missing pieces. In M. A. Bloter and R. Ruth (Eds.), Sometimes you just want to feel like a human being: Case studies of empowering psychotherapy with people with disabilities (pp. 183-190). Baltimore, MD: Paul H. Brookes Publishing Company.

  • Dosomantes (Beaudry), I. (1992). Spatial patterns associated with the separation-individual process in adult long-term psychodynamic movement therapy groups. The Arts in Psychotherapy, 19, 3-11. Dosomantes (Beaudry), I. (1992). Body-image repository for cultural idealizations and denigration of the self. The Arts in Psychotherapy, 19, 257-267.

    Dosomantes (Beaudry), I. (1992). The intersubjective relationship between therapist and patient: A key to understanding denied and denigrated aspects of the patient self. The Arts in Psychotherapy, 19, 359-365.

    Dosamantes (Beaudry), I. (1987). Transference and countertransference issues in movement psychotherapy. The Arts in Psychotherapy, 14,209-214.

    Dosomantes (Beaudry), I. (1986). A current perspective of imagery in psychoanalysis. Imagination, Cognition and Personality, 5, 199-209.

  • Downing, David L. (Editor), The Newsletter/Journal for the Chicago Open Chapter for the Study of Psychoanalysis, APA Division 39 [Society for Psychoanalysis and Psychoanalytic Psychology], Section IV [Local Chapters] 1989 - 2018.

    Downing, David L. (1994). “A Brief Comment on the History of the Chicago Open Chapter for the Study of Psychoanalysis”, in The History of the Psychoanalytic Movement in Psychology. Lane, Robert and Meisels, Murray (Eds.), Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, New York.

    Downing, David L. (1993). “Controversies on Psychoanalytic Education: Race and Psychoanalysis”. The International Federation for Psychoanalysis Newsletter, 2 (I), 32-36.

    Downing, David L. (1994). “De-centermg: The Concept and Its Application in the Treatment of Inner City Patients”, The International Federation for Psychoanalytic Education Newsletter, 3(I),47-49.

    Downing, David L. (1994). “Basic Concepts In Psychoanalytic Education at the Doctoral Level: A Psychoanalytic Psychology Minor and Its Relationship to the Core Curriculum in an APA-Accredited Clinical Psychology Programme”, The International Federation for Psychoanalytic Education Newsletter, 3(I), 50-53.

    M. Leifer, M. Connors, P. Gruenhut, H. Evans, N. Cairns, M. Lawrence, A. Womack, and D. Downing (1995). “The Development of a Graduate Program in Sexual Abuse”. Professional Psychology Research and Practice, 26(3), 252-256.

    Downing, David L. and Kerbis, Kim (1998). “Exterminate All Rational Thought: David Cronenberg’s Filmic Vision of William S. Burroughs’s Naked Lunch”. The Psychoanalytic Review. 85 (5), 775-792.

    Downing, David L. (2000). “Controversies in Psychoanalytic Education: The Issue of Race and Its Relevance in Psychoanalytic Treatment”. The Psychoanalytic Review. (3), 355-376.

    Downing, David L. (2001). Book Review. The Analyst in the Inner City: Race, Culture, and Class Through a Psychoanalytic Lens by Neil Altman, Analytic Press, 1995. Psychologist-­Psychoanalyst. 21(3), 56-58.

    Downing, David L. (2004). On Re-Reading Bellak Twenty-five Years Later:  A Commentary on Crises and Special Problems in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy by Leopold Bellak and Pen Faithorn, Basic Books. Psychologist-Psychoanalyst, 25 (1), 64-67.

    Downing, David L. (2004). Book Review. The Collapse of the Self by Rochelle Kainer, The Analytic Press, 1999. For Psychologist-Psychoanalysis.  25 (1), 60-62.

    Downing, David L (2005). “Somnolence in the Psychotherapeutic Situation”. In Mills, Jon (Editor). Relational and Inter-subjective Perspectives in Psychotherapy. New York: Jason Aronson Press.

    Downing, DL, Greenlee, T, and Louria, S (2006).  “Psychoanalytic Training Opportunities in Pre-Doctoral Internships:  Opportunities and Challenges”, Psychologist-Psychoanalyst, 26(4), 81-84. 

    Downing, David L (2007).  “Paranoiac Visions and Neo-Realities the Recent Cinema: Reflections on Victor Tausk’s ‘Influencing Machine in Schizophrenia”.  Psychoanalytic Review. 94(6), 991-1006

    Downing, David L, Dershowitz, A, & Higgins, B (2012).  “Inclusion of Psychoanalytical Thought in Doctoral Programs of Psychology”.  Division Review:  A Quarterly Psychoanalytic Forum.  5(3), 38-41.

    Downing, David L., Weber, Barry J. (2009). Object-Relations and Self-Psychology:  A User-Friendly Primer. University of Indianapolis Press, Indianapolis, Indiana.

    Downing, David L, Dershowitz, A, & Higgins, B (2012).  “Inclusion of Psychoanalytical Thought in Doctoral Programs of Psychology”.  Division Review:  A Quarterly Psychoanalytic Forum.  5(3), 38-41.

    Downing, David L. (2014).  Book Review: “The Christopher Bollas Reader”, by Christopher Bollas.  Psychoanalytic Psychology, 31(1), 151-156.

    Boshkoff Johnson, Emily & Downing, David L. (2014). Book Review: “The How-To Book for Students of Psychoanalysis & Psychotherapy”.  Psychoanalytic Psychology, 31(2), 288-292.

    Downing, David L and Mills, Jon, Editors (2017).  Out-Patient Treatment of Psychosis:  Psychodynamic Perspectives on Evidence- Based Practice.  London and New York:  Routledge Press.   

    Downing, David L, Lubin, MI, Yalof, J (2018).  Teaching, Training, and Administration in Graduate Psychology Programs:  Psychoanalytic Perspectives.  Rowan and Littlefield:  New York, New York. 

    Downing, David L and Mills, Jon, Editors (2019).  Lacan on Psychosis: From Theory to Praxis.  London and New York:  Routledge Press.  

  • Eagle, M. N. (2011). Classical theory, the enlightenment vision, and contemporary psychoanalysis. In M. Diamond & C. Christian (Eds.), The second century of psychoanalysis: Evolving perspectives on therapeutic action (pp.41-67). London: Karnac.

  • Ekstein, R. (1987). Reflections on the meanings of “borderline”: Between metaphor and concept. In J. Grotstein, M. Soloman, & J. Lang (Eds.), The borderline patient (pp. 95-104). Hillsdale NJ: Analytic Press.

    Ekstein, R. (1984). Fairy tales and dreams. Dreamworks, 4, 130-136.

    Ekstein, R. (1983). Children of time and space, of action and impulse: Clinical studies on the psychoanalytic treatment of severely disturbed children. New York: Jason Aronson.

    Ekstein, R. (1983). Play therapy for borderline children. In C. Schaefer & K. O’Connor (Eds.), Handbook of play therapy (pp. 412-418). New York: John Wiley & Sons.

    Ekstein, R., & Friedman, S. (1983). The meaning of play in childhood psychoses. In P. Giovacchini & B. Boyer (Eds.), Technical factors in thetreatment of the severely disturbed patient (pp. 409-438). New York: Jason Aronson.

    Ekstein, R. (1981). Some thoughts concerning the clinical use of children’s dreams. Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, 45, 115-124.

    Ekstein, R., & Motto, R. (1980). From learning for love to the love of learning: Essays on psychoanalysis and education. New York: Bruner/Mazel.

    Ekstein, R. (Ed.) (1976). In search of love and competence: Twenty-five years of service, training, and research at the Reiss-Davis Child StudyCenter. New York: Bruner/Mazel.

    Ekstein, R., & Wallerstein R. (1972). The teaching and learning of psychotherapy. New York: International Universities Press.

    Ekstein, R. (1971). The challenge-despair and hope in the conquest of inner space: Further studies of the pychoanalytic treatment of severely disturbed children. New York: Bruner/Mazel.

    Ekstein, R. (1968). Psychoanalysis and social crises. Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, 33, 333-345.

    Ekstein, R., & Caruth, E. (1968). Levels of verbal communication in the schizophrenic child’s struggle against, for, and with the world of objects. The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, 24, 115-137.

    Ekstein, R. (1968). Concerning the teaching and learning of psychoanalysis. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 17, 312-332.

    Ekstein, R. (1968). Impulse-acting out-purpose: Psychotic adolescents and their quest for goals. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 49,347-351.

    Ekstein, R., & Friedman, S. (1967). Object constancy and psychotic reconstruction. The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, 22, 337-374.

    Ekstein, R., & Caruth, E. (1967). Activity-passivity in the treatment of childhood psychosis.  Journal of the American PsychoanalyticAssociation, 22, 723-726.

    Ekstein, R. (1965). Working through and termination of analysis. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 15, 57-78.

    Ekstein, R. (1965). Historical notes concerning psychoanalysis and early language development. Journal of the American PsychoanalyticAssociation, 13, 707-731.

    Ekstein, R., & Rangell, L. (1961). Reconstruction and theory formation. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 9, 684-687.

    Ekstein, R. (1960). The teaching of psychoanalytic technique. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 8, 167-174.

    Ekstein, R. (1960). A historical survey of the teaching of psychoanalytic technique. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 8, 500-516.

    Ekstein, R. (1958). Faith and reason in psychotherapy. Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, 22, 104-108.

    Ekstein, R., & Friedman, S. (1957). The function of acting out, play action and play acting in the psychotherapeutic process. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 5, 581-629.

    Ekstein, R., & Wallerstein, J. (1957). Choice of interpretation in the treatment of borderline and psychotic children. Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, 21, 199-206.

    Ekstein, R. (1956). A clinical note on the therapeutic use of a quasi-religious experience. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 4, 304-313.

    Ekstein, R. (1955). Termination of the training analysis within the framework of present-day institutes. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 3, 600-614.

    Ekstein, R., & Wright, D. (1952). The space child. Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, 16, 211-224.

    Ekstein, R. (1950). Trial analysis in the therapeutic process. Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 19, 52-63.

    Ekstein, R. (1949). Ideological warfare in the psychological sciences. Psychoanalytic Review, 36, 144-151.

    Ekstein, R. (1949). A biographical comment on Freud’s dual instinct theory. Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, 13, 172-175.

    Ekstein, R. (1948). Dynamic aspects of the teaching of psychology. Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, 12, 90-95.

    Ekstein, R., & Bellak, L. (1946). The extension of basic scientific laws to psychoanalysis and psychology. Psychoanalytic Review, 33, 306-313.

  • Garfield, S. (2003). Transference in analytic psychodrama. In: J. Gershoni (Ed.), Psychodrama in the Twentieth Century: Clinical and Educational Applications, 15-30. New York: Springer Publications.Garfield, S. (2003). Transferencia no psicodrama analitico. Revista Brasileira de Psicodrama. Vol. 11, Numero 2, 13-26.

  • Hamilton, V. (1996). The analyst’s  preconscious. Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press.

    Hamilton, V. (1994). Reflections on affective provision: Commentary on John Lindon’s “Gratification and provision in psychoanalysis.”Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 4, 609-617.

    Hamilton, V. (1993). Truth and reality in psychoanalytic discourse. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 74, 63-79.

    Hamilton, V. (1986). Grief and mourning in Tennyson’s “In Memoriam.” Free Associations, 7, 87-110.                                                                   Hamilton, V. (1982). Narcissus and Oedipus: The children of psychoanalysis. London: Routledge.

  • Helscher, T. (2011). From under long shadows: Identification and disidentification in analysis. In M. J. Diamond & C. Christian (Eds.),The second century of psychoanalysis: Evolving perspectives on therapeutic action (pp. 237-255). London: Karnac.

  • Hoffman, I. (2003)  Identity maintenance in the affectively distant patient. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association 51:491-515.Hoffman, I. (2013)  Identity disturbance in distant patients. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association 61: 257-281.

  • Hollander, N.C., & Portuges, S.H. (2011). The therapeutic action of resistance analysis: Interpersonalizing and socializing Paul Gray’s close process attention. In M. J. Diamond & C. Christian (Eds.), The second century of psychoanalysis: Evolving perspectives on therapeutic action(pp.71-95). London: Karnac.

    Hollander, N. C. (2010). The uprooted mind: Surviving the politics of terror in Americas. London: Routledge.

    Hollander, N. C. (2008). Living danger: On not knowing what we know. Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 18, 690-709.

    Zysmer, S., & Hollander, N. C. (2000). Erna and Melanie Klein. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 81, 579-581.

  • Horowitz, M. (1990). Institute and alternative training models: A response. In M. Meisels & E. R. Shapiro (Eds.), Tradition and innovation inpsychoanalytic education: Clark conference on psychoanalytic psychoanalytic training for psychologists (pp.95-101). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

  • Hybels-Steer, M (1995). Aftermath: Survive and Overcome Trauma. New York: Simon & Schuster.

  • Cohen, D. , & Jay, S. (1996). Autistic barriers in the psychoanalysis of borderline adults. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 77, 913-933.

  • Kalish, B. (2011). Movement thinking and therapeutic action in psychoanalysis. In M. J. Diamond & C. Christian (Eds.), The second century of psychoanalysis: Evolving perspectives on therapeutic action (pp.257-275). London: Karnac.

    Kalish-Weiss, B., & Rangell, L. (2009). Interview with Dr. Leo Rangell by Dr. Beth Kalish-Weiss Los Angeles, California, July 2008.International Forum of Psychoanalysis, 18, 107-115.

    Kalish-Weiss, B. (1995). Psychoanalysis and the creative process. Zeitchrift fur Tanstherale, 2, 37-44.

    Wener, C., Ruttenberg, B., Kalish-Weiss, B., & Wolf, E. (1986). The development of normal and autistic children: A comparative study.Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 16, 317-333.

    Kalish-Weiss, B. (1982). Attachment and separation: Major themes in movement therapy with adults. International Journal of Arts inPsychotherapy, 9, 249-257.

    Kalish-Weiss, B. (1983). Infant assessment of language, movement behaviors and psychosexual development. In J. Call & E. Galenson (Eds.), Frontiers in infant psychiatry (pp.413-424). New York: Basic Books.

  • Kurgan, L. K. (2016). A Crowd of One. Cape Town, South Africa: Dr. Kurgan and Kaplan Centre University of Cape Town; 1st Edition. 

    Kurgan, L. (2001). Memories, healing, reconciliation and forgiveness. Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy in South Africa, 9, 1-10.

  • Lawrence, E. (1994). Section I: Psychologist-Psychoanalyst practitioners – a history. In R.C. Lane & M. Meisels (Eds.), A History of the Division of Psychoanalysis of the American Psychological Association, (pp.167-175). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.

  • Malin, A. (1993). A self-psychological approach to the analysis of resistance: A case report. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 74, 505-518.

    Malin, A. (1990). Psychotherapy of the narcissistic personality disorders. In A.Tasman, S. Goldfinger, & C. Kaufman (Eds.), Review of Psychiatry, 9, 355-368.

    Malin, A. (1987). Construction and reconstruction: Clinical aspects. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 30, 213-233.

    Malin, A., & Grotstein, J. (1986). Projective identification in the therapeutic process. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 47, 26-31.

  • McBride, T (2020). Trauma and the Destructive-Transformative Struggle: Clinical Perspectives, Terrence McBride and Maureen Murphy, eds., London and New York, Routledge.

  • Paul, D. (1987). The analysis of autistic character structure in a borderline patient: A clinical case presentation. In J. S. Grotstein, M. F. Solomon &  J. A. Lang (Eds.), The borderline patient (pp.149-171). Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press.

  • Porter, P. (2011). The analyst’s subjective experience: Holding environment and container of projections. In M. J. Diamond & C. Christian (Eds.), The second century of psychoanalysis: Evolving perspectives on therapeutic action (pp.187-201). London: Karnac.

    Firman, G., & Porter, P. (1978). Staff splitting on medical-surgical wards. Psychiatry, 41, 289-295.

    Porter, P. (1975). The symbolism of color. International Journal of Symbology, 6, 1-9.

  • Portuges, S. H., & Hollander, N. C. (2011). The therapeutic action of resistance: Interpersonalizing and socializing Paul Gray’s close process attention technique. In M. J. Diamond and C. Christian (Eds.), The second century of psychoanalysis: Evolving perspectives on therapeutic action (pp. 71-95). London: Karnac.

    House, J., & Portuges, S. (2005). Relational knowing, memory, symbolization, and language: Commentary on the Boston change process study group. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic, Association 53, 731-743.

  • Rangell, L. (2011). The aims and method of psychoanalysis a century later. In M. J. Diamond & C. Christian (Eds.), The second century of psychoanalysis: Evolving perspectives on therapeutic action (pp.21-40). London: Karnac.

    Kalish-Weiss, B., & Rangell, L. (2009). Interview of  Dr. Leo Rangell by Dr. Beth Kalish-Weiss, Los Angeles, California, July 2008, International Forum of Psychoanalysis, 18, 107-115.

    Rangell, L. (2009). Music in the head: Living in the brain-mind border. London: Karnac.

    Rangell, L. (2006). The road to unity in psychoanalytic theory. New York: Jason Aronson.

    Rangell, L. (2004). My life in theory. New York: Other Press.

    Rangell, L. (1980). The mind of Watergate: An exploration of compromise of integrity. New York: W. W. Norton.

    For more of Dr. Rangell’s work, see www.sigourneyaward.org (1991).

  • Sanville, J. (2002). When therapist and analyst are both in Erikson’s eighth stage. Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 22: 626-639.

    Puget, J., & Sanville, J. (2000). Social reality. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 81, 998-1000.

    Sanville, J. (1999). Contemporary psychoanalytic voices in North America: The death of gender stereotypes or the birth of new fictions of feminity? Gender and Psychoanalysis, 4, 225-252.

    Sanville, J. (1998). Transcending gender stereotypes: Eluding the Eva Personista position. Gender and Psychoanalysis, 3, 175-211.

    Sanville, J. (1997). Philosophical consideration in analysis. Clinical Social Work, 25, 19-25.

    Edward, J., & Sanville, J. (1996). Fostering healing and growth: A psychoanalytic social work approach. Dunmore, PA: Jason Aronson.

    Sanville, J. (1991). The playground of psychoanalytic therapy. Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press.

    Sanville, J. (1987). Creativity and the constructing of the self. Psychoanalytic Review, 74, 263-279.

    Sanville, J. (1982). Partings and impartings: Toward a nonmedical approach to interruptions and terminations. Clinical Social Work Journal, 10, 123-131.

    Shor, J., & Sanville, J. (1978). Illusion in loving: A psychoanalytic view of the evolution of intimacy and autonomy. New York: International Universities Press.

    Sanville, J. (1976). On our clinical fantasy of reality. Clinical Social Work, 4, 245-251.Shor, J., & Sanville, J. (1974). Erotic provocations and dalliances in psychotherapeutic practice. Clinical Social Work, 2, 83-95.

  • Schuman, M. (1991). The problem of self psychoanalysis: Lessons from Eastern philosophy. Psychoanalysis and Contemporary Thought, 14, 595-624.

    Schuman, M. (2017). Mindfulness-Informed Relational Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis: Inquiring Deeply. Published by Routledge Press, January 2017.

  • Blum, A., & Shadduck, C. (1991). Object choice revisited. Psychoanalytic Psychology, 8, 59-68.

  • Sobelman, L. (2011). Back to the future: The curative fantasy in psychoanalysis. In M. J. Diamond & C. Christian (Eds.), The second centuryof psychoanalysis: Evolving perspectives on therapeutic action (pp. 145-159). London: Karnac.

  •  Spivak, A. (2011). The interpretive act: Returning freedom and agency to a beleaguered ego. In M. J. Diamond & C. Christian (Eds.), The second century of psychoanalysis: Evolving perspectives on therapeutic action (pp. 121-144).  London: Karnac.

  • Wittenberg, K. J. and Norcross, J. C. (2001). Practitioner perfectionism: Relationship to ambiguity tolerance and work satisfaction. J. Clin. Psychol., 57: 1543–1550

  • Black, C., Bucky, S., & Wilder Padilla, S. (1986). The interpersonal and emotional consequences of being an adult child of an alcoholic. International Journal of Addictions, 21 (2), 213-221. 

  • Wolson, P.  (2019).  Psychoanalysis Enters The Political Fray: The Op-Ed Articles and Journal Blogs of Peter Wolson. New York: International Psychoanalytic Books. 

    Wolson, P. (2012, December 20). Fiscal Cliff: D.C.’s Mayan Apocalypse. Thomson Reuters.

    Wolson, P. (2012). Working with the relational unconscious: An integration of intrapsychic and relational analysis. Psychoanalytic Review, 99, 209-225.Wolson, P. (2012, October 1). Does dependency on government make Americans weak? A psychoanalyst’s perspective. Huntington Post.

    Wolson, P. (2012, July 3). The Aurora massacre: Coping with the precarious nature of human existence. Huntington Post.

    Wolson, P. (2011, November 10). The Joe Paterno syndrome: Idealization and the corruption of morality. Huntington Post.

    Wolson, P. (2011). Political power: an alluring stimulant for regression and omnipotence. In E. Ronis & L. Shaw (Eds.), Greed, sex money, power, and politics (pp. 141-154). New York: International Psychoanalytic Books.

    Wolson, P. (2011). The seminal therapeutic influence of analytic love: A pluralistic perspective. In M. J. Diamond & C. Christian (Eds.),The second century of psychoanalysis: Evolving perspectives on therapeutic action (pp. 163-185). London: Karnac.

    Wolson, P. (2011, October 16). Is stuttering biological or psychological? Huntington Post.

    Wolson, P. (2008, October 20). The hatred between Republicans and Democrats: The conflict within America’s psyche, redux. Huntington Post.

    Wolson, P. (2008, October 16). America’s racism: Hatred of “the other” in the 2008 presidential election. Huntington Post.

    Wolson, P. (2005). The existential dimension of psychoanalysis (EDP): Psychic survival and the fear of psychic death (nonbeing).Psychoanalytic Review, 92, 675-699.

    Wolson, P. (2004, May 22/23). The underlying dynamic of post 911 America: Exhibitionistic Revenge at Abu Ghraib. Weekend edition of Counterpunch.

    Wolson, P. (2004, February 14/15). Politics of narcissism: America’s grandiose persona under Bush. Weekend edition of Counterpunch.

    Wolson, P. (2001, September 2). The politics of confession. Los Angeles Times Opinion section.

    Wolson, P. (2001, March 18). All our children: The inner appeal of America’s primal families. Los Angeles Times Opinion section.

    Wolson, P. (2000, November 26). America’s state of mind: Healthy and divided. Los Angeles Times Opinion section.

    Wolson, P. (2000, May 28). A world of psychophobia. Los Angeles Times Opinion section.

    Wolson, P. (1999, December 5). When politics is also psychology. Los Angeles Times Opinion section.

    Wolson, P. (1999, August 22). Strange to say but neurotics are preferable. Los Angeles Times Opinion section.

    Wolson, P. (1999, May 9). Politics of victimhood: A perpetual cycle of abuse. Los Angeles Times Opinion section.

    Wolson, P. (1999, January 24). Hating the politician in the mirror. Los Angeles Times Opinion section.

    Wolson, P. (1995). The vital role of adaptive grandiosity in artistic creativity. Psychoanalytic Review, 82, 577-597.

    Wolson, P. (1995). Some reflections on adaptive grandiosity in fatherhood. In J. Shapiro, M. J. Diamond, & M. Greenberg (Eds.), Becoming a father: Contemporary, social, developmental, and clinical perspectives (pp. 286-292). New York: Springer.

    Wolson, P. (1974). Loss of impulse control in psychodrama in inpatient services. In I. Greenberg (Ed.), Psychodrama: Theory and therapy (pp. 325-339).  London: Souvenir Press.

    Wolson, P. (1972, August 20). Eagleton and America’s psychophobia. Los Angeles Times Opinion section.

  • Wrye, H. K. (2011). Pulling up stakes: Stepping into freedom. Los Angeles, CA: Rare Bird Books.

    Wrye, H. K. (2009). The fourth wave of feminism: Psychoanalytic perspective introductory remarks. Studies in Gender and Sexuality, 10, 185-189.

    Wrye, H. K. (2007). Perversion annihilates creativity and love: A passion for destruction in Haneke’s The Piano Teacher. Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 27, 455-466.

    Wrye, H. K. (2006). Sitting with eros and psyche on a Buddhist psychoanalyst’s cushion. Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 16, 725-746.

    Wrye, H. K. (2006). Deconstructing the unconscious saboteur: Composing a life with ambition and desire. International Forum of Psychoanalysis, 15, 70-80.

    Wrye, H. K. (2001). Breakthroughs and phallacies: Commentary on paper by Dianne Elise. Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 11, 533-539.

    Wrye, H. K. (1999). Introduction. Gender and Psychoanalysis, 4, 3-6.

    Wrye, H. K. (1999). Embranglements in the maternal erotic playground: “They aftly go awry.” Gender and Psychoanalysis, 4, 7-21.

    Diamond, D., & Wrye, H. K. (1998). Prologue. Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 18, 139-146.

    Diamond, D., & Wrye, H. K. (1998). Epilogue. Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 18, 311-334.

    Wrye, H. K. (1998). Tuning a clinical ear to the ambiguous chords of June Champion’s The Piano. Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 18, 168-182.

    Wrye, H. K. (1997). Projections of domestic violence and erotic terror on the film screen. Psychoanalytic Review, 84, 681-699.

    Wrye, H. K. (1996). Dead babies and the birth of desire: Maternal erotic transferences and countertransferences. Journal of the AmericanAcademy of Psychoanalysis, 24, 75-94.

    Wrye, H. K. (1996). Bodily states of mind: Dialectics of psyche and soma in psychoanalysis. Gender and Psychoanalysis, 1, 283-296.

    Wrye, H. K., & Welles, J. (1994). The narration of desire. Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press.

    Wrye, H. K. (1993). Hello, the hollow deadspace or playspace? Psychoanalytic Review, 80, 101-122.

    Wrye, H. K. (1993). Erotic terror: Male patients’ horror of the early maternal erotic transference. Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 13, 240-257.

    Welles, J. K., & Wrye, H. K. (1991). The maternal erotic countertransference. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 72, 93-106.

  •  Yahalom, I. (1967). Sense, affect, and image in development of the symbolic process. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 48, 373-383.

    Yahalom, I. (1967). Diagnosis of mental illness in children. Reiss-Davis Clinic Bulletin, 4, 105-114.

    Rice, G., Kepecs, J., & Yahalom, I. (1966). Differences in communicative impact between mothers of psychotic and nonpsychotic children. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 36, 529-543.