BGSP Faculty Member Mentioned in New York Times
Congratulations to BGSP Faculty member Dr. Stephen Soldz on his recent mention in the New York Times article, “Psychologists to Review Role in Detainee Interrogations”. [Read More]
Congratulations to BGSP Faculty member Dr. Stephen Soldz on his recent mention in the New York Times article, “Psychologists to Review Role in Detainee Interrogations”. [Read More]
Part of my interest in psychoanalysis is that it sometimes leads me to places I had never guessed could be. When people I encounter learn I’m a psychoanalyst they usually [Read More]
The Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis would like to congratulate faculty member Dr. Vincent Panetta on his recognition by South Shore Mental Health for his 15 years of service. [Read More]
Last month saw a little noticed but still major development in the field of psychoanalysis. The Psychodynamic Research email list (or, colloquially, “listserv”) passed its 10 year milestone as a forum [Read More]
The Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis marked its 30th annual Cape Cod conference with four days of presentations and discussion of Controversies in Psychoanalysis. The Conference featured daily topics that [Read More]
Recently a surprising thing happened as my analysand was talking about whether he could trust his assessments of new emotional experiences. He wondered, did I know what he was talking [Read More]
The Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis would like to congratulate Benjamin Day, Alumnus of the Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis, on recently being named the new Executive Director of the Marblehead [Read More]
The entire BGSP administrative team has been hard at work pulling together ideas and new material for the School’s NEW website. We hope to launch the site near the beginning of the [Read More]
As social media creeps into more and more previously private parts of our lives, it is understandable that even clinicians in the mental health field would be tempted to join [Read More]
Director of outreach services for South Shore Mental Health in Plymouth, Massachusetts reports that he and his staff have stopped the “revolving door that is so typical of mental health services.” [Read More]