Upcoming Colloquium
Past Colloquia
May 15, 2024
“A discussion for our times: Why War? … with Freud’s (1933) paper of the same name as springboard”
Given the current situation in so many parts of the world and the ways in which the lives of so many are impacted, Shlomit and I, in consultation with the Colloquium Committee and the ECC, decided that we needed to do something that acknowledges our reality at the moment, rather than a purely academic paper.
October 29, 2023
From Oedipus Complex to Oedipal Complexity
Reconfiguring (Pardon the Expression) the Negative Oedipus Complex and the Disowned Erotics of Disowned Sexualities.
In this paper, as the title implies, Jody attempts to complicate and “complexify” some of the dynamics of human sexuality. Despite its publication in 2015, in many places the world over we are still battling stereotyped binary perceptions of sexual identity and the restrictive and punitive policies employed to enforce them. Jody is also hoping to use this forthcoming colloquium to bring some new theorizing on the issue, so there is much scope for conversation and dialogue regarding different understandings of the concepts.
June 9, 2022
The Sleepy Analyst Struggles to Awaken: Dissociation, Enactment, Regression, and Altered States with Trauma Patients
This paper acknowledges and discusses the analyst’s sleepiness as a defense against affect in the patient and analyst. It explores the phenomenon as an enactment of parental unavailability and abandonment and a primitive communication from the patient about early states of psychological deadness and unintegration. In the context of relational literature that celebrates engaged and enlivened registers, this article considers the problems and potentials of dwelling in a distanced and deadened intersubjective field.
December 19, 2021
The Analyst’s Self-Revelation: Not Just Permissible but Necessary
The Analyst’s Self-Revelation: Not Just Permissible but Necessary In this colloquium, we intend to have conversations about relational technique in general, with specific focus on Bromberg’s proposal that ‘self-revelation is not only permissible but necessary’. While perhaps a well-worn trope, we are of the opinion that it is still a […]
August 2, 2021
The Malignant Ambiguity of Incestuous Language
This eloquent paper takes on the difficult but therapeutically essential topic of the language of the incestuous encounter, and the ways in which what purports to contain attachment and meaning in fact attacks precisely those qualities. We believe that the discussion of this paper will offer rich opportunity for both clinical and theoretical exploration, and will provide a much-needed opportunity for us to think together even while we cannot meet in person as yet.
April 29, 2021
The Traumatic No Man’s Land of Psychic Devastation: Beyond Mourning and Melancholia
This eloquent paper takes on a state of grief and loss beyond mourning and melancholia, and “makes a case for acknowledging a third category of loss: psychic devastation … that turns out to be an impediment to the process of mourning.”
October 10, 2020
Airless World: Sequelae of Identification with Parental Negation
Steven Stern interweaves a variety of theoretical strands into his own unique integration, extending his self-psychologically informed ideas about “needed” relationships. The article is intellectually challenging and clinically accessible; we are hoping it will engage broad participation across the IARPP community.
March 14, 2020
Working During the Coronavirus Health Crisis: An Open Forum
Working During the Coronavirus Health Crisis: An Open Forum We invite all IARPP members to join in our online project: Working During the Corona Virus Health Crisis: An Open Forum to discuss reactions, thoughts and concerns, whether theoretical, clinical, or personal about the crisis that we are coping with around […]
July 30, 2019
Death of a Parent: Openings at an Ending
Death of a Parent: Openings at an Ending As the new co-chairs of the IARPP Colloquium Committee, we’re pleased to announce the forthcoming colloquium. We will be discussing Mary Joan Gerson’s 2018 paper from Psychoanalytic Perspectives, “Death of a Parent: Openings at an Ending”. This beautiful article explores the way […]
March 27, 2019
Psychoanalytic Companioning
Psychoanalytic Companioning This paper will be a wonderful introduction to Robert Grossmark’s book, also called The Unobtrusive Relational Analyst. In that book, his perspective on treatment and on work with trauma is very clearly developed and clinically illuminated. Here in this essay, we are asked to consider subtle but deep […]
July 8, 2018
The Draw to Overwhelm: Consent, Risk and the Re-Translation of Enigma
Saketopoulou’s work advances an alternative exegesis of perverse sexuality that permits an analyst to regard it not from within a state of alarm but with the capacity to recognize perversity’s generative potential. Relying on Laplanche’s theory of infantile sexuality, she suggests that the sexualization of suffering is developmentally installed in sexuality’s very ontology. Although frequently and reflexively conceptualized in psychoanalysis as a demise of the sexual function, perversion can be oftentimes sexuality’s aspiration.
April 23, 2018
The Problem of thinking in Black and White: Race in the South African Clinical Dyad
Esprey argues that race, as it presents itself within the clinical dyad as an aspect of the relationship between therapist and patient, has scarcely been written about from an experience-near perspective within the South African context. This paper focuses on the difficulty of speaking and writing about race. It contends that race as a construct and as an aspect of subjectivity has the potential to interrupt the therapist’s capacity to think, in Bionian terms, and to prevent entry into the reverie that is crucial to…
September 25, 2017
When time stands still: the non-interactive interaction in the psychoanalytic encounter.
Shalgi sees the most basic endeavor therapists and their patients are struggling with as that of entering into the realm of death with open eyes. In his paper, the term ‘death’ means both psychic death and actual death, both the cessation of psychic life and of actual life.
April 17, 2017
Unconscious Processes in Relation to the Environmental Crisis
CE Credits: 3 The program is free of cost to all IARPP members. For psychologists: IARPP is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. IARPP maintains responsibility for this program and its content. This program is valid for 3 CE Credits. For social workers: IARPP has […]
August 28, 2016
God at an Impasse: Devotion, Social Justice, and the Psychoanalytic Subject
We are excited to have Dr. Grand as our next featured author. Her work has been a very influential source of relational thinking over the last decade and we look forward to another rich and creative two weeks of dialogue with an international panel and all of you.
March 14, 2016
Subjectivity and the Collective: Encountering the Political in Psychoanalysis
Eyal Rozmarin demonstrates how he conceptualizes the decisive impact of social and historical forces in our lives and particularly in the psychoanalytic encounter. Using an emotionally powerful clinical vignette and a theoretical perspective woven from the ideas of Michel Foucault, Giles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, Rozmarin examines ways in which…