The Story of Original Loss: Grieving Existential Trauma in the Arts and the Art of Psychoanalysis
Publication Announcement by Malcolm Owen Slavin (USA)
Slavin, M.O. (2024). The story of original loss: Grieving existential trauma in the arts and the art of psychoanalysis. Routledge.
This book, part of Routledge’s “Art, Creativity and Psychoanalysis Book Series,” explores the universal human existential trauma of “original loss,” a trauma that Slavin describes as arising from our primal, human evolutionary loss of experiencing ourselves as innately belonging to, and instinctively at home within, the larger natural world.
In this trauma arose our existential awareness of impermanence and mortality along with the need to mourn that loss in order to create a sense of belonging and identity. The Story of Original Loss describes how the invention of art and group ritual became the collective ways we mourn our shared existential loss. It describes as well how it is the art within the psychoanalytic practice that enables both patient and analyst to grieve their individual versions of our shared original loss. Drawing on the work of Winnicott, Loewald and Ogden as well as art theory and religion, this book offers a new perspective on the intersection of metaphorical artistic thinking and psychoanalysis.
Malcolm Owen Slavin, Ph.D., is a founder, faculty and supervisor at the Massachusetts Institute for Psychoanalysis, and a director of IARPP and the Council for Psychoanalytic Self Psychology. A Yale graduate, with a Ph.D. in psychology from Harvard, he has authored many papers, including “Why the Analyst Needs to Change,” and a book (with D. Kriegman), The Adaptive Design of the Human Psyche: Psychoanalysis, Evolutionary Biology, and the Therapeutic Process.
Malcolm O. Slavin, Ph.D.
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
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