7th CLINICAL STUDY DAYS
Paradoxes of Transference
February 14-16, 2014
New York City
CALL FOR PAPERS – ATTENTION: EXTENDED DATELINE!
The Seventh Clinical Study Days are to be hosted in New York City in February 14-16, 2014, with the participation of Miquel Bassols, Psychoanalyst, AME, member of the WAP and the ELP. Future President of the World Association of Psychoanalysis and with the special participation of Pierre-Gilles Gueguen, Psychoanalyst, Delegate of the World Association of Psychoanalysis for the USA.
The theme of the meeting is “Paradoxes of Transference”.
Argument
Freud was the first to reveal the paradoxes of transference in the analytic setting, saying that it was at the same time the motor and the obstacle of the treatment.
Lacan developed further the concept of transference, making it a cornerstone of his School and the Pass procedure. He considered that Transference is related to the Unconscious and to Knowledge. He invented a new name for it: The Subject Supposed to Know. Transference concerns a knowledge that doesn’t belong to either of the partners of the analytic setting, either the analyst nor the analysand, but rather a knowledge that is supposed, that is of the unconscious and that is produced, or not, at each encounter.
Transference is one of what Lacan called the Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis; it is not possible to conceive psychoanalytic treatment without transference.
We can say that, in a certain way, the concept of Transference transcends the different theoretical registers.
From the Imaginary—all the aspects of transference-love—to the Symbolic—the relation to the signifiers— to transference in the Real: how are today’s clinicians dealing with transference?
This is especially important to review now, for transference today seems more and more linked to “virtual” space and time —to the time and space of the internet— and requires more than ever the “real presence of the analyst” that Lacan referred to in “The Direction of the Treatment.”
How can we support that “real presence” in the era of protocols and a praxis that tends ever more to do without speech?
There are inherent paradoxes to the space of transference: how “to call from the inside” to open the door of the unconscious, according to Lacan in “Position of the Unconscious.” With regard to the contemporary symptoms, the clinical phenomena that we are presented with today: are they more close to the locus of the Other, more autistic regarding transference?
There are paradoxes in the time of transference: how to open and develop the transference of the necessary ”time to know,” including also the shortness or extension of treatment today that can be studied from the “theory of cycles” that Jacques-Alain Miller introduced some years ago in relation to the CPCT clinic.
These and other questions will be addressed during the CSD7.
The Scientific Committee of the CSD7 invites you to present a paper at this meeting. We are soliciting two types of papers.
The first is clinical case presentations, where the theme of the Study Days “Paradoxes of Transference” should be addressed. Papers should be both at most 20 minutes long when read aloud and at most 15.000 characters with spaces in length.
The second is papers that address this theme from a cultural or societal perspective, or treat the theme from a theoretical perspective. They will be part a round table. Papers in this category should be both at most 10 minutes long when read aloud and at most 7.5000 characters with spaces in length.
Please send your texts to the CSD7 Scientific Committee at [email protected]. Papers should be submitted not later than January 15th, 2014. We appreciate your interest and collaboration on the Clinical Study Days, and we are looking forward to receiving your papers and to seeing you in New York City.
Check the CSD7 web page: www.clinicalstudydays.us
Scientific Committee:
Pierre-Gilles Gueguen
Maria Cristina Aguirre
Juan Felipe Arango
Fernando Schutt
Tom Svolos
Karina Tenenbaum