Compiled by JoAnn Ponder, PhD with helpful suggestions from Sheldon Itzkowitz, PhD & Jon Allen, PhD
PART I: From Reality to Fantasy and Back Again
Sep. 13: Early and Conflicting Views of the Origins of Childhood Abuse and Trauma
1) Simon, B. (1992). "Incest—See under Oedipus complex": The history of an error in psychoanalysis. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 40: 955-988.
2) Ferenczi, S. (1949). Confusion of tongues between the adults and child—(the language of tenderness and passion). International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 30: 225-230.
Oct. 11: Recognition of the Effects of Childhood Neglect and Cumulative Trauma
1) Ferenczi, S. (1929). The unwelcome child and his death-instinct. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 10: 125-129.
2) Spitz, R. (1945). Hospitalism—An inquiry into the genesis of psychiatric conditions in early childhood. Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, 1: 53-74.
3) Khan, M. R. (1963). The concept of cumulative trauma. Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, 18: 286-306.
Nov. 8: Psychoanalytic Reconstruction of Trauma
1) Kris, E. (1956). The recovery of childhood memories in psychoanalysis. Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, 11: 54-88.
2) Blum, H. P. (1986). The concept of the reconstruction of trauma. In Rothstein, A., The reconstruction of trauma: Its significance in clinical work, 80: 7-27.
3) Wetzler, S. (1985). The historical truth of psychoanalytic reconstructions. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 12: 187-197.
Nov. 15: From Drive Theory (Fantasy) to a Reality-Based View of Psychic Trauma and Diagnosis of PTSD
1) Phillips, S. (1991). Trauma and war—A fragment of an analysis with a Vietnam veteran. Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, 46: 147-180.
2) Davies, J. M., & Frawley, M. G. (1991). Dissociative processes and transference-countertransference paradigms in the psychoanalytically oriented treatment of adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse. Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 2: 5-36.
Nov. 29: The Reality of Childhood Trauma
1) Terr, L. C. (1979). Children of Chowchilla—A study of psychic trauma. Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, 34: 547-623.
2) Goodwin, J. (1988). Post-traumatic symptoms in abused children. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 1: 475-488.
PART II: Controversies and Differing Types of Trauma
Dec. 6: Unformulated Experiences of Trauma
1) Stern, D. B. (1983). Unformulated experience —From familiar chaos to creative disorder. Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 19: 71-99.
2) Coates, S. (2016). Can babies remember trauma? Symbolic forms of representation in traumatized infants. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 64: 751-776.
Dec. 13: Controversies About Recovered Memories
1) Allen, J. G. (1995). The spectrum of accuracy in memories of childhood trauma. Harvard Review of Psychiatry, 3: 84-95.
2) Target, M. (1998). The recovered memories controversy. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 79: 1015-1028.
Dec. 20: Doubts About the Credibility of MPD (Multiple Personality Disorder)
1) Kluft, R. P. (1992). Discussion: A specialist’s perspective on multiple personality disorder. Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 12: 139-171.
2) Howell, E. F. & Itzkowitz (2016). From trauma-analysis to psycho-analysis and back again. In E. F. Howell & S. Itzkowitz, Eds., The dissociative mind in psychoanalysis: Understanding and working with trauma. Routledge, pp. 20-32.
Jan. 10: Dissociation as Normal Defense Versus the Dissociative Structuring of the Mind
1) Bromberg, P. M. (1996). Standing in the spaces: The multiplicity of self and the psychoanalytic relationship. Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 32: 509-535.
2) Howell, E. F. & Itzkowitz (2016). The everywhereness of trauma and the dissociative structuring of the mind. In E. F. Howell & S. Itzkowitz, Eds., The dissociative mind in psychoanalysis: Understanding and working with trauma. Routledge, pp. 33-43.
Jan. 17: Conflict or Deficit?
1) Sugarman, A. (1995). Psychoanalysis: Treatment of conflict or deficit? Psychoanalytic Psychology, 12: 55-70.
2) Busch, F. N. (2017). A model for integrating actual neurotic or unrepresented states and symbolized aspects of intrapsychic conflict. Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 86:75-108.
Jan. 24: Conceptualizations and Treatment of Adults with a History of Relational Trauma
1) Shengold, L. (1978). Assault on a child’s individuality: A kind of soul murder. Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 47: 419-424.
2) Shaw, D. (2010). Enter ghosts: The loss of intersubjectivity in clinical work with adult children of pathological narcissists. Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 20: 46-59.
3) Stern, S. (2019). Airless worlds: The traumatic sequelae of identification with parental negation. Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 29: 435-450.
Feb. 21: Adult-Onset Trauma Versus Cumulative Trauma
1) Boulanger, G. (2002.) The cost of survival: Psychoanalysis and adult onset trauma. Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 38: 17-44.
2) Boulanger, G. (2002). Wounded by reality: The collapse of the self in adult onset trauma. Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 38: 45-76.
PART III: Differing Conceptualizations of Trauma and Models of Treatment
Mar. 20: Psychoanalytic Approaches Versus Trauma Models
1) Kernberg, O. F. (1976). Technical considerations in the treatment of borderline personality organization. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 24: 795-829.
2) Lewis, J. L. (1996). Two paradigmatic approaches to borderline patients with a history of trauma: The expressive psychotherapy of Otto Kernberg and the trauma model of Judith Lewis Herman. Journal of Psychotherapy Practice and Research, 5: 1-19.
Apr. 10: Body-Based Approaches to Trauma
1) Van der Kolk, B. A. (1994). The body keeps the score: Memory and the evolving psychobiology of post-traumatic stress. Harvard Review of Psychiatry, 1: 253-265.
2) Ogden, P. (2014). “I can see clearly now the rain has gone”: The role of the body in forecasting the future. In Petrucelli, J. (Ed.), Body states: Interpersonal and relational perspectives on the treatment of eating disorders. Routledge, pp. 92-103.
Apr. 17: Integration of Trauma Models with Psychoanalytic Models of Treatment
1) Kluft, R. (2000). The psychoanalytic psychotherapy of dissociative identity disorder in the context of trauma therapy. Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 20: 259-286.
2) Levit, D. (2022). Somatic Experiencing: Enhancing psychoanalytic holding for trauma and catastrophic dissociation - Contending with the flood and the fog. Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 32: 235-252.
Apr. 24: Treating Trauma with Psychotherapy
1) Allen, J. G. (2012). Chapter 5: Plain old therapy. In Restoring mentalizing in attachment relationships: Treating trauma with plain old therapy. American Psychiatric Publishing, pp. 159-215.
2) Kalsched, D. (2016). Jung and dissociation: Complexes, dreams, and the mythopoetic psyche. In E. F. Howell & S. Itzkowitz, Eds., The dissociative mind in psychoanalysis: Understanding and working with trauma. Routledge, pp. 85-96.
May 8: Further Developments in the Conceptualization and Treatment of Trauma
1) Matheson, C. (2016). A new diagnosis of complex Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, PTSD—a window of opportunity for the treatment of patients in the NHS? Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, 30: 329-344.
2) Fisher, J. (2017) Twenty-five years of trauma treatment: What have we learned? Attachment: New Directions in Relational Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy, 11: 273-289.
May 15: The Evolution of Relationality in the Conceptualization and Treatment of Trauma
1) Howell, E.F. & Itzkowitz, S. (2022). The unconscionable in the unconscious: The evolution of relationality in the treatment of trauma. In M.J. Dorahy, S.N. Gold, & J.A. O’Neil (Eds.), Dissociation and the dissociative disorders: Past, present, future (2nd Edition) New York: Routledge, pp. 728-745.
2) Kluft, R. P. (2022). A mutual appreciation of differences: My conversation with Philip M. Bromberg. Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 2: 438-460.
May 22: Open Discussion
What is trauma? Has the term been overused/overgeneralized? Is there such a thing as Big T Trauma versus small t trauma?
Study Group Honorees
*Jean M. Goodwin, MD, MPH graduated with an MD from Harvard Medical School in 1971 and a Master of Public Health in epidemiology from UCLA in 1972. She did her first two years of psychiatric residency at Georgetown University Hospitals and finished her residency at the University of New Mexico School of Medicine where she stayed on as faculty directing the psychiatric residency. It was in Albuquerque in the late 1970’s that she began consulting to child protective services and discovered that children’s complaints about sexual abuse were assumed to be fantasies. Correcting this assumption led to three books: Sexual Abuse: Incest Victims and Their Families; Rediscovering Childhood Trauma; and Splintered Reflections: Images of the Body in Trauma (with Reina Attias). Jean worked as a Professor of Psychiatry at Medical College of Wisconsin and at the University of Texas Medical Branch where she retains a clinical appointment. She is board certified in General Psychiatry, Forensic Psychiatry, and Psychoanalysis. Since 1998 she has been in full time private practice in Galveston, Texas. She began psychoanalytic training at the Chicago Psychoanalytic Institute and completed training at the Houston-Galveston Psychoanalytic Institute (now the Center for Psychoanalytic Training) in 1999 where she continued on the faculty and is now a training and supervising analyst. Since 2005 she has taught the standard dissociation course through the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation (ISSTD), together with other members of the Houston-Galveston Trauma Consortium. She is a fellow of ISSTD and of the American Psychiatric Association. She has published over 100 articles and book chapters, many focused on trauma.
*Jon G. Allen, Ph.D, holds the position of Clinical Professor as a member of the Voluntary Faculty in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas. He is a member of the honorary faculty at the Center for Psychoanalytic Studies in Houston and the adjunct faculty of the Institute for Spirituality and Health at the Texas Medical Center, also in Houston. After completing postdoctoral training at the psychoanalytically-oriented Menninger Clinic, he remained on staff there, where he taught and supervised fellows and residents; conducted psychotherapy and diagnostic consultations; and led research on clinical outcomes. He and his colleagues developed an intensive inpatient treatment program for trauma, in which he created what became a hospital-wide psychoeducational program on recovering from trauma. Having retired from clinical practice after 40 years at the clinic, he continues to teach, write, and consult with psychotherapists. His books include Trusting in Psychotherapy; Restoring Mentalizing in Attachment Relationships: Treating Trauma with Plain Old Therapy; Mentalizing in Clinical Practice (with Peter Fonagy and Anthony Bateman); Coping with Trauma: From Self-Understanding to Hope; and Coping with Depression: From Catch-22 to Hope, all published by the American Psychiatric Association. Additional books are Mentalizing in the Development and Treatment of Attachment Trauma (Karnac/Routledge) and Traumatic Relationships and Serious Mental Disorders (Wiley).
IMAGES of T/t fonts, doll head, and figure in light tunnel from Can Stock; photo of Freud's office from Alamy