Introduction 1. Thomspon, Sullivan, Fromm, and Horney 2. Psychoanalytic Institutes and Societies: From Washington-Baltimore to New York City 3. Summers in Provincetown: From Repression to Expression 4. Creating a Tradition: Bringing the Past to the Future 5. Evolution Revolution: Thompson's Psychology of Women 6. The William Alanson White Institute: "It's My Child" 7. Written Out of History: Death by Silence 8. The Legacy of Clara Mabel Thompson and On Touching the Future
Ann D'Ercole is a Clinical Associate professor of Psychology at the New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, where she is both teaching faculty and supervisor. She is also a distinguished visiting faculty at the William Alanson White Institute and recipient of the APA, Division 39, Sexualities and Gender Identities Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Advancement of Sexualities and Gender Identities in Psychoanalysis. Dr. D'Ercole is in private practice in New York City.
'In my candidacy at the White institute in the early fifties, I was
interviewed by Dr. Thompson, took her courses, was in supervision
with her and later came to know her during summers on the Cape. I
am delighted to see this thoughtful and respectful book by Dr.
D’Ercole. It is a labor of love by a prominent feminist
psychoanalyst in tribute to a much-overlooked major contributor to
psychoanalytic theory and practice. That is, of course, consistent
with the treatment of women in most scientific venues at the time,
but also "Clara’s" (we all called her that, but not always to her
face) modesty led her to act as a portal to the work of Sullivan
and Fromm - the two other founders of WAW. Dr. D’Ercole has done an
outstanding job of explicating Dr. Thompson’s prescient
contributions to modern psychoanalytic theory and practice but has
also grasped her in her most human aspects. For all my long
association with Dr. Thompson, and in spite of her friendliness and
egalitarianism, I hardly knew her. I trust this outstanding book
will remedy this oversight and revitalize a much-deserved interest
in this most interesting and complex person.' Edgar Levenson is a
fellow emeritus, faculty, training and supervisory analyst at the
William Alanson White Institute; he is adjunct clinical professor
of Psychology at New York University, and author of Fallacy of
Understanding; The Ambiguity of Change; The Purloined Self; and
Interpersonal Psychoanalysis and the Enigma of Consciousness'Clara
Thompson was not only one of the most important leaders in the
psychoanalysis of her time, but also one of the singular figures in
the entire history of the discipline. She was a pioneer in so many
ways, founding and then directing one of the most significant
psychoanalytic institutes, bringing together the work of Erich
Fromm and Harry Stack Sullivan to create interpersonal
psychoanalysis, and creating one of the first bodies of work
devoted to the psychology of women. She was one of those who
created the study of gender and sexuality. She was a powerfully
inspiring leader at a time when that was highly unusual for a woman
in psychiatry or psychoanalysis. Thompson richly deserves Ann
D’Ercole’s deep, thorough, and moving account of her life. This
two-volume work is absolutely riveting, an instant classic that
will be read and studied not only by psychoanalysts and other
psychotherapists, but by anyone interested in cultural history,
feminism, the history of psychiatry, and gender and
sexuality.'Donnel B. Stern most recently authored The Infinity of
the Unsaid: Unformulated Experience, Language, and the
Nonverbal'Ann D’Ercole’s two-volume biography carefully documents
and reveals Clara Thompson’s often-overlooked role and
contributions to the development of interpersonal psychoanalysis in
the United States. "Clara," as interpersonalists still refer to her
today, was analyzed by Sandor Ferenczi in Budapest and worked
closely with Harry Stack Sullivan, Erich Fromm and Frieda
Fromm-Reichman. She was the first Director of the William Alanson
White Institute in New York City (currently housed in the Clara
Thompson building) and the training and supervising analyst for
many pioneers of contemporary interpersonal and relational theory.
D’Ercole has done an exemplary and engaging job of correcting this
historical omission of Thompson’s foundational role as "An American
Psychoanalyst".'
Jack Drescher is a training and supervising analyst at the William
A. White Institute; adjunct professor of the Postdoctoral Program
in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis; a clinical professor of
Psychiatry at Columbia University; and senior psychoanalytic
consultant at the Columbia Center for Psychoanalytic Training and
Research'Ann D'Ercole has accomplished a special scholarly work
about Clara Thompson, M.D. Has Thompson having been a foremost
student of Sandor Ferenczi placed her in the analytic shadows?
Ann’s thorough, lively and insightful writing brings Thompson out
of the shadows and into the limelight where she belongs. Ann’s
outstanding research has clarified Thompson's brilliant
contributions to psychoanalysis: a prominent figure in establishing
the American School of Psychoanalysis; a leading contributor in the
formation of the Interpersonal School of Psychoanalysis; a leading
student and advocate of the work of Sandor Ferenczi and Henry Stack
Sullivan; a founder of the William Alanson White Institute; a
leading feminist of her time; a pioneering theorist and clinician
in establishing the two person perspective in psychoanalysis. Ann’s
biography of Thompson should become the premium resource that
rediscovers the importance of Clara Thompson for
psychoanalysis.'Arnold Wm. Rachman is a training and supervisory
analyst at the Postgraduate Psychoanalytic Institute, NYC; clinical
professor of Psychology at Adelphi University's Postdoctoral
Program in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy, Garden City, NY;
associate professor of Psychiatry at New York University Medical
Center, NYC; donor of the Elizabeth Severn Papers, The Library of
Congress; and recently authored Psychoanalysis and Society’s
Neglect of the Sexual Abuse of the Children, Youth and Adults
(Routledge).'In this engaging paean to the life of Clara Thompson,
D’Ercole excavates, brings to life, and carries forth the
historical record in adroitly making the case that Thompson
deserves placement in the upper echelons of the pantheon of
psychoanalysts. She plumbs the depths of her own personal
connection to Thompson in illuminating the essential contributions
of Thompson to the field of interpersonal psychoanalysis. A hidden
gem, not just for readers unfamiliar with Thompson’s work, this is
a must read for all.'Jean Petrucelli is faculty, training, and
supervising analyst at the William Alanson White Institute; adjunct
professor and clinical consultant of the NYU Postdoctoral Program
in Psychotherapy & Psychoanalysis; and most recently, co-editor of
the book, Patriarchy and Its Discontents
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