Archetypal Meanings, Transitions, and Transformations

Saturday, 3 December 2022 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM EST

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Saturday, 3 December 2022 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM EST

What Psychoanalysis Brings to the World of Mental Health

Archetypal Meanings, Transitions, and Transformations

Saturday, December 3, 2022         10:00 to 11:30 AM

Marilyn Charles, Ph.D., ABPP

Free or $25 for 1.5 CE’s

 

Trauma resists symbolization while also demanding recognition.  Literature has often moved into that gap, providing embodied experiences through which to encounter universal themes from different perspectives.  Engaging both body and mind, literature invites deep reflection upon our ethics and values, sorely needed in these challenging times.

In increasing our isolation, COVID has enforced a different engagement with self and other, both more remote and more intimate, as we learn to accommodate to what we cannot change and are invited to move past the alienation and inhabit ourselves more fully.  Emerging from the immensity of isolation, informed by the ancestral past, we find ourselves survivors in a field of wreckage.  How, then, do we live in a world both lighter and darker, glorious in its colours but cloaked in mourning?  

Important to our psychic survival are the theories that help to temper our limited perspectives and self interest, and also the characters we encounter that enable us to recognize and reconsider our lived values.  Whereas Richard Powers’ novel, The Overstory, invites us to consider our relationships to greed and waste and to the narcissism of self-interest through which we are destroying the planet and also ourselves, Mike Flanagan’s tales of horror depicted on the small screen bring issues of haunting into the intra- and interpersonal domain, the territory of psychoanalytic hope and healing. 

At the core of these stories is an encounter with the après-coup, the point beyond, when we must face damage already done, and when it is not only our survival that is at stake but also that of others.  The clinician must face these challenges in ourselves if we are to support our patients in their journeys.  In these efforts, metaphors such as Bion’s O, Lacan’s sinthome, Bachelard’s poetics of space, and Hillman’s soul-making help us to find our way in such treacherous terrain.

 

Presenter:  Marilyn Charles, PhD, ABPP is a psychologist and psychoanalyst at the Austen Riggs Center, Co-Chair of the Association for the Psychoanalysis of Culture and Society (APCS) and Scholar of the British Psychoanalytic Council.  She is committed to mentoring future generations of psychoanalytic scholars, clinicians and researchers.  Affiliations include Chicago Center for Psychoanalysis; Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis; Universidad de Monterrey; Harvard Medical School. Books include: Patterns, Constructing Realities, and Psychoanalysis and Literature: The Stories We Live; Book chapters include: ‘Creative Transformations: The Establishment, the Mystic and the Aesthetic Drive’. In. M. Brown & R. S. Brown (Eds) Emancipatory Perspectives on Madness: Psychological, Social, and Spiritual Dimensions, and ‘Literary Analysis in Psychosocial Context’. In: S. Frosch, M. Vyrgioti, & J. Walsh (Eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of Psychosocial Studies. Forthcoming from APA Press:  Trauma, Memory, and Identity: A Clinician’s Guide.

 

Objectives

As a result of this presentation, participant will be able to:

1. Discuss examples of how literature provides enhanced understanding of universal themes of trauma. 

2.  Discuss how COVID has enforced a different engagement with self and other.

 

3. Identify metaphors in literature and psychoanalytic theory which support the clinician’s efforts help themselves and their patients.

 

Questions? email continuinged@bgsp.edu or call (617) 277 - 3915

BGSP is authorized to provide CEs for:  Psychologists (all levels), Social Workers, Counselors 

Fee:  Free or $25 for [1.5] CE’s/Clock Hours*

*Full refund available if you cancel one week prior to the event. If you have any questions, email info@bgsp.edu.

Offering CEs for:  Psychologists (all levels), Social Workers, Mental Health Counselors

Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. BGSP maintains responsibility for this program and its content.

Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis has been approved by NBCC as an Approved Continuing Education Provider, ACEP No. 5676. Programs that do not qualify for NBCC credit are clearly identified. Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis is solely responsible for all aspects of the programs.

Application for social work continuing education credits is being submitted. Please contact us at ContinuingEd@BGSP.edu for the status of social work CE accreditation.

For information on continuing education credits for nurses, social workers, or marriage and family counseling, call 617-277-3915.

Direct inquiries may be made regarding the accreditation status by NECHE to the administrative staff of the institution. Individuals may also contact: New England Commission on Higher Education, 3 Burlington Woods Drive, Ste 100, Burlington, MA 01803-4514, 781-425-7785 or email: info@neche.org

 

The Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis is accredited by the New England Commission on Higher Education. 

Direct inquiries may be made regarding the accreditation status by NECHE to the administrative staff of the institution. Individuals may also contact: New England Commission on Higher Education, 3 Burlington Woods Drive, Ste 100, Burlington, MA 01803-4514, 781-425-7785 or email: info@neche.org

Cancellation policy

*Full refund available if you cancel one week prior to the event. If you have any questions, email info@bgsp.edu 

The Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis

http://www.bgsp.edu