Upcoming Events at the Cleveland Psychoanalytic Center in January
We would like to inform you of two special events in January 2014.On Friday, January 24th, we are presenting Dr. Carol Salus who will speak to us about, "Behind the Celestial Enchantment: The Private Self and Early Movie Star Portraits of Andy Warhol."Carol Salus, Ph.D. is Associate Professor, School of Art, Kent State University and a Graduate Faculty Member. She is co-editor of the anthology, Out of Contexts: American Artists Abroad (January 2003 Greenwood Press). She received a University Research Council Grant for her work on her manuscript on Picasso and the fifteenth-century novel, La Celestina.Dr. Salus was National Endowment for the Humanities scholar for a summer seminar to further research a book, which is now under review, and has delivered papers at numerous professional conferences including two presentations for the conference, "Creativity and Madness," held by the American Institute of Medical Education.This event is free and open to the public. It will begin with and an hors d'oeuvres reception at 6:00 pm at the CPC offices. The talk will be from 7:00 pm to 8:30 pm.LEARNING OBJECTIVES:
- To understand the relationship of Andy Warhol's art in the context of his psychic conflicts.
- To place Warhol's pop art into the cultural tumult and experimentation of the 1960s.
- To theorize the place creativity in psychic conflict, development and sublimation.
Continuing education credits (1.5 credit hours) for Center members is $15.00 and $22.50 for non-members. Seating is limited and reservations are required. Please call 216-229-5959 or email dmorsecpc@sbcglobal.net. On Friday evening, January 31st, Beth Ash, Ph.D. our 2103 Essay Contest winner will present her winning essay, " A Consulting Room of Their Own: Film Representations of Psychotherapy Between the Female Clinician and Female Patient in the Contexts of Second-wave Feminism."
6:00 pm to 7:00 pm Hors d'oeuvres reception7:00 pm to 8:30 pm Presentation - Free and open to the public Beth S. Ash is Associate Professor of English and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at the University of Cincinnati, where she teaches courses in Literary Modernism, Literary and Cultural Theory, and Women’s Literature. She is author of Writing In Between: Modernity and Psychosocial Dilemma in the Novels of Joseph Conrad, psychoanalytically informed articles on numerous topics, including several articles on Henry James, and is currently working on a book on "Psychoanalysis, Narrative, and Popular Culture. " The paper has two projects. First, it critiques and redirects some central research on gendered, stereotypical film images of the psychotherapist, with the intent of producing a more nuanced, historically located view of how these images (taken from the 1970s) first raised the question of feminism. Second, it provides close readings of representations of female psychotherapists in relation to female patients in four 1970s films—I Never Promised You A Rose Garden (1977), An Unmarried Woman (1978), The Bell Jar (1979), and A Question of Silence (1982). These representations, taken from both dominant- and art- cinema productions, reflect in varying degrees critical social and psychoanalytic knowledge, as well as feminist interests and expectations. Such films following the principle that personal is the political did much to cultivate audience expectations for a new kind of realism about subjectivity in the movies, and even allowed for the complex and serious film and television representations of psychotherapy that we see today. This is a non-credit bearing lecture. Please reserve by calling 216-229-5959 or emailing dmorsecpc@sbcglobal.net.Our thanks to Drs. Anna and Thomas Janicki for making this prize possible.