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Dear Colleague,
The 23rd Annual Conference on the Psychology of The Self will
be held at the Chicago Marriott Hotel on North Michigan Avenue in
Chicago, November 9-12, 2000. Most of you know Chicago, and know of the
rich mix of art, architecture, music, theater, and restaurants the city
offers. This year is no exception. There are special exhibits at the
Field Museum, the Chicago Art Institute, the Oriental Institute, and the
Museum of Contemporary Art, an exciting theater season, and music of all
sorts. If you stay a little longer or go out several of the evenings,
you will find many wonderful opportunities to refresh your spirit.
The conference itself promises a splendid intellectual feast.
The title is Explorations into the Clinical Process and the
Human Condition, and the conference will do just that. The
first two panels will focus on central clinical issues. Panel
I: The Role of Empathy and Interpretation in the Therapeutic Process,
on Friday afternoon, will be structured around several questions about
the clinical process posed to the panel and later to the conference
participants. Salee Jenkins will present a case, and the discussants
will be Dan Kriegman and Marian Tolpin. James Fosshage will moderate the
panel and will offer clarifications and comparisons of the discussants'
ideas. Panel II: The Role of
the Relationship in the Therapeutic Process, on Saturday
morning, will begin with a case presentation by Joye Weisel-Barth. The
discussants will be Robert Stolorow and Lewis Aron. Estelle Shane will
moderate the panel that will be structured the same way as the first
panel. Small group discussions led by self psychologists from around the
world will follow each panel.
Panel III: Self
Psychology, Psychoanalysis and the Understanding of the Human Condition,
on Sunday morning, will look at the way self psychology has
changed our understandings of the human experience, its implications for
psychoanalysis and for all of the social sciences. Charles Strozier, who
has just completed his biography of Heinz Kohut, will begin; Judith
Teicholz, the author of Kohut, Loewald and Postmodernism will
continue, and Gerald Izenberg whose pre-analytic background was
professor of the history of ideas, will be the third. Arnold Goldberg
will chair the panel. It promises a Sunday of extraordinary richness.
The Kohut Memorial
Lecture entitled Reflective Relativism and Kohut's Self
Psychology will be given by Mark Gehrie, MD. Prior to the Kohut
Memorial Lecture, a special award will be given to Miriam Elson for her
lifetime contributions to self psychology. That is not all, of course.
There will be 36 outstanding papers and discussions in three sessions
covering clinical, theoretical and applied areas of discourse. The
Pre-Conference Program will offer master classes, sessions on group,
marital, and child therapy, special sessions on optimal responsiveness
with Howard Bacal, a workshop on gender and sex, and a plenary with Paul
Ornstein who will lead an exercise in the process of consultation with a
colleague.
There is a lot of enthusiasm for the conference, and I suggest
that everyone register at the earliest opportunity. This may be a fully
subscribed meeting.
I look forward to seeing you all in Chicago in November.
David M. Terman, M.D.
Chair, 23rd Annual International Conference
Conference
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