LAST CHANCE TO BOOK - REMOTE CONTROL: PSYCHOANALYSIS AND TELEVISION
Saturday 30 October 2010
Day Conference at the Anna Freud Centre
Psychotherapists, psychoanalysts, academics, programme makers and presenters discuss the emotional function and ethics of TV in the modern world.
SATURDAY 30TH OCTOBER 9.30am - 5.00pm
Candida Yates (Introduction)
'Staging the Debate: Remote Control: Television, Media and the Inner World'
Panel 1: Television from both sides of the couch
How does TV culture infiltrate the therapeutic space, and how is psychotherapy represented on TV?
Brett Kahr: Television as Rorschach
Caroline Bainbridge: Psychotherapy on the Couch: Exploring the Fantasies of In Treatment
Chair and respondent: Dan Chambers (Independent producer and former director of Programmes for Ch 5)
Panel 2: Ethics and Therapy on TV
The ethical dilemmas of putting real lives on TV
Richard McKerrow (producer) discusses his Marchioness Documentary;
Oliver James discusses his TV programmes including Under Fives; Room 113 and Men on Violence.
Chair and Respondent: Valerie Sinason (Psychoanalyst)
Panel 3: Watercooler Moments: TV as Transitional Object
TV offers the possibility of shared cultural experiences. Does it also have therapeutic potential?
Tom Sutcliffe (presenter and journalist)
Sue Vice (Professor of English)
Carol Leader (psychotherapist; former presenter and actor)
Chair: Sara Ramsden (Consultant executive producer for the BBC)
Panel 4: Roundtable discussion
Barry Richards - summary and reflections with speakers from the day
This conference is organised in conjunction with Media and the Inner World http://www.miwnet.org/
FRIDAY 29 OCTOBER
The Saturday Conference is preceded by an 'in conversation' with award-winning television scriptwriter Laurence Marks and psychoanalyst Valerie Sinason.
Laurence Marks is a Bafta award winning writer and producer of shows and plays for stage and screen; he is well known for his collaborative writing work with Maurice Gran. His TV work includes a number of highly successful comedy sitcoms, including: Shine on Harvey Moon (1982), Birds of a Feather (1989-1998), The New Statesman (1987-1992), Goodnight Sweetheart (1993-99) and Love Hurts (1992-94). He has also written for the theatre, including the acclaimed play Dr. Freud Will See You Now Mrs. Hitler (BBC Radio 4, and Tricycle Theatre, 2007) and the West End Musical Dreamboats and Petticoats (nominated for a Lawrence Olivier Award for 'Best New Musical', 2010).
Registration:
FRIDAY EVENING: £12 or £10 for Friends of the Freud Museum
SATURDAY: £50 Full Price; £35 Students and unwaged (£5 discount for Friends)
Please click here for online booking http://www.freud.org.uk/shop/CONFERENCE__REMOTE_CONTROL__PSYCHOANALYSIS_AND_TELEVISION.html
Or please send a cheque payable to 'The Freud Museum', including your name, address, telephone number and profession.
Freud Museum
20 Maresfield Gardens, London NW3 5SX
Tel: +44 (0)20 7435 2002
www.freud.org.uk
Monday, 25 October 2010
Tuesday, 28 September 2010
Open Seminar Schedule
from the Centre for Psychoanalytic Studies, University of Essex (Colchester Campus)
27 October 2010:
Terrors of Growing Old – Ageism in Therapeutic Care with Older People (Paul Terry)
Paul Terry is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist and Specialty Lead for Older People in a Specialist Mental Health Team for Older People in Hertfordshire Partnership NHS Foundation Trust.
17 November 2010:
Found objects and mirroring forms (Dr Ken Wright)
Dr. Ken Wright is a member of the British Psychoanalytic Society, Tavistock Society of Psychotherapists and Society of Couple Psychoanalytic Psychotherapists. He is also Patron of the Squiggle Foundation.
08 December 2010:
Reverie in psycho-social research method (Wendy Hollway)
Wendy Hollway is Professor in Psychology at the Open University.
The Open Seminars all take place in room 4N.6.1 from 5.00-6.30pm
All Welcome
T 01206 873640 E cpsadmin@essex.ac.uk www.essex.ac.uk/centres/psycho
27 October 2010:
Terrors of Growing Old – Ageism in Therapeutic Care with Older People (Paul Terry)
Paul Terry is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist and Specialty Lead for Older People in a Specialist Mental Health Team for Older People in Hertfordshire Partnership NHS Foundation Trust.
17 November 2010:
Found objects and mirroring forms (Dr Ken Wright)
Dr. Ken Wright is a member of the British Psychoanalytic Society, Tavistock Society of Psychotherapists and Society of Couple Psychoanalytic Psychotherapists. He is also Patron of the Squiggle Foundation.
08 December 2010:
Reverie in psycho-social research method (Wendy Hollway)
Wendy Hollway is Professor in Psychology at the Open University.
The Open Seminars all take place in room 4N.6.1 from 5.00-6.30pm
All Welcome
T 01206 873640 E cpsadmin@essex.ac.uk www.essex.ac.uk/centres/psycho
Wednesday, 28 July 2010
Conference Announcement
The Centre for Psychoanalytic Studies
University of Essex, Colchester
Presents a One-day Conference
Why the Mainstream Needs its Margins: The Function
of the Marginalised in Psyche and Society
Saturday, 13 November 2010
For decades sociologists, politicians, historians and identity theorists have been concerned to reintegrate invisible and discarded groups from the margins of society. We have learned to listen for voices beyond the boundaries of dominant groupings – regarding ethnic or gender identities; the criminalised and disenfranchised; the migrant and the underclass. But the margins are at the same time some of the most highly visible aspects of society. Daily the media turn their lens on immigrants, on anti-social youths, on gays, on ethnic minorities, and on the mentally ill. The engendering of moral panic over those who exist on the margins is central to the way non-marginal and mainstream identities function. This one-day conference brings together sociological, historical and psychoanalytic perspectives to examine the margins as a symptom of so-called ‘normal’ identity. What do we project onto the margins, how are they identified with, how do they operate as part of the psychic economy of the mainstream? Could a centre exist without its margins?
Panels on:
What Happened to Deviance?
Immigration: Fantasies and Realities
Panic, Trauma and Making Enemies
Marginalising the Fear of Madness
Speakers include:
Simon Clarke (UwE), Colin Samson (Essex), Karl Figlio (Essex), Jeffrey Murer (St Andrews), Eamonn Carrabine (Essex), Tim Dartington (Tavistock Institute), Joan Busfield (Essex), Aaron Balick (Essex)
Cost: £55 for the day (£35 students/unwaged)
For booking and registration see attached booking form, or contact Debbie Stewart: Centre for Psychoanalytic Studies, University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester C04 3SQ Tel: 01206 873640; Fax: 01206 872746; cpsadmin@essex.ac.uk
University of Essex, Colchester
Presents a One-day Conference
Why the Mainstream Needs its Margins: The Function
of the Marginalised in Psyche and Society
Saturday, 13 November 2010
For decades sociologists, politicians, historians and identity theorists have been concerned to reintegrate invisible and discarded groups from the margins of society. We have learned to listen for voices beyond the boundaries of dominant groupings – regarding ethnic or gender identities; the criminalised and disenfranchised; the migrant and the underclass. But the margins are at the same time some of the most highly visible aspects of society. Daily the media turn their lens on immigrants, on anti-social youths, on gays, on ethnic minorities, and on the mentally ill. The engendering of moral panic over those who exist on the margins is central to the way non-marginal and mainstream identities function. This one-day conference brings together sociological, historical and psychoanalytic perspectives to examine the margins as a symptom of so-called ‘normal’ identity. What do we project onto the margins, how are they identified with, how do they operate as part of the psychic economy of the mainstream? Could a centre exist without its margins?
Panels on:
What Happened to Deviance?
Immigration: Fantasies and Realities
Panic, Trauma and Making Enemies
Marginalising the Fear of Madness
Speakers include:
Simon Clarke (UwE), Colin Samson (Essex), Karl Figlio (Essex), Jeffrey Murer (St Andrews), Eamonn Carrabine (Essex), Tim Dartington (Tavistock Institute), Joan Busfield (Essex), Aaron Balick (Essex)
Cost: £55 for the day (£35 students/unwaged)
For booking and registration see attached booking form, or contact Debbie Stewart: Centre for Psychoanalytic Studies, University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester C04 3SQ Tel: 01206 873640; Fax: 01206 872746; cpsadmin@essex.ac.uk
Thursday, 13 May 2010
Open Seminar
Centre for Psychoanalytic Studies
University of Essex
Wednesday 2nd June 2010
Room 4N.6.1
5.00pm – 6:30pm
Dr Leon Burnett
‘The Construction of a Fantasia: Dostoevsky’s Meek Girl and Two Russian Suicides’
Dr Leon Burnett is a Reader in Literature and Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Comparative Studies at the University of Essex. His publications are mainly in Comparative Literature. Research areas of particular interest include modern European poetry, literary translation, myth in modern culture, and Russian literature. He has edited F. M. Dostoevsky (1821-1881): A Centenary Collection (1981) and Word in Time: Poetry, Narrative, Translation (1997), and is currently co-editing The Art of Accommodation: Literary Translation in Russia (publication expected later this year). From 1992 to 2000 he was the main editor of New Comparison: a Journal of Comparative and General Literary Studies.
Abstract: In A Writer’s Diary (October, 1876), Dostoevsky juxtaposed two reports of recent and contrasting female suicides, concluding with the question “which of these two souls bore more torment on earth”? The next instalment of the journal (November, 1876) contained a single piece of writing, “The Meek Girl: A Fantastic Story”, clearly based on the second of the two contemporary cases. The suicides served to bring together in Dostoevsky’s mind concepts that he had previously treated separately and, in his view, unsuccessfully: effacement (in The Double) and enigma (in The Idiot). Stimulated by a desire to comprehend the “psychological sequence” of events leading up to the act of suicide, Dostoevsky returned in “The Meek Girl” to these concepts, transferring the focus from male protagonists to an unnamed female character. I shall be looking at how, in this late work, he took up the challenge of finding an appropriate form to express an impenetrable theme.
ALL WELCOME
Details of all our Open Seminars can be found at:
http://www.essex.ac.uk/centres/psycho/news_and_seminars/seminars.aspx
For further information, or if you are interested in presenting an Open Seminar, please contact:
Tel: 01206 873075 / Email: cpsadmin@essex.ac.uk
University of Essex
Wednesday 2nd June 2010
Room 4N.6.1
5.00pm – 6:30pm
Dr Leon Burnett
‘The Construction of a Fantasia: Dostoevsky’s Meek Girl and Two Russian Suicides’
Dr Leon Burnett is a Reader in Literature and Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Comparative Studies at the University of Essex. His publications are mainly in Comparative Literature. Research areas of particular interest include modern European poetry, literary translation, myth in modern culture, and Russian literature. He has edited F. M. Dostoevsky (1821-1881): A Centenary Collection (1981) and Word in Time: Poetry, Narrative, Translation (1997), and is currently co-editing The Art of Accommodation: Literary Translation in Russia (publication expected later this year). From 1992 to 2000 he was the main editor of New Comparison: a Journal of Comparative and General Literary Studies.
Abstract: In A Writer’s Diary (October, 1876), Dostoevsky juxtaposed two reports of recent and contrasting female suicides, concluding with the question “which of these two souls bore more torment on earth”? The next instalment of the journal (November, 1876) contained a single piece of writing, “The Meek Girl: A Fantastic Story”, clearly based on the second of the two contemporary cases. The suicides served to bring together in Dostoevsky’s mind concepts that he had previously treated separately and, in his view, unsuccessfully: effacement (in The Double) and enigma (in The Idiot). Stimulated by a desire to comprehend the “psychological sequence” of events leading up to the act of suicide, Dostoevsky returned in “The Meek Girl” to these concepts, transferring the focus from male protagonists to an unnamed female character. I shall be looking at how, in this late work, he took up the challenge of finding an appropriate form to express an impenetrable theme.
ALL WELCOME
Details of all our Open Seminars can be found at:
http://www.essex.ac.uk/centres/psycho/news_and_seminars/seminars.aspx
For further information, or if you are interested in presenting an Open Seminar, please contact:
Tel: 01206 873075 / Email: cpsadmin@essex.ac.uk
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