by Andie Newman | Aug 7, 2020 | Uncategorized
Our offer of free supervision and therapy to key workers was very successful. We are now offering affordable, low cost therapy and supervision. For low cost reflective supervision, please contact TheSiteforContemporaryPsy@gmail.com
If you are affected more broadly by the Covid-19 pandemic and are considering psychotherapy, please contact us via our Clinic, email SiteClinic@yahoo.com or phone 07765 007295 or via contact details on Member and Trainee webpages.
by Andie Newman | Jun 28, 2020 | Uncategorized
The mental health
effects on Black Americans of the more than 300 police killings of Black people
in their country each year, at least a quarter of whom were unarmed, were the
subject of a study in The Lancet in June 2018.
One member has drawn
our attention to Nix and Lozada’s critical review of this study, which found 93
of its incidents to be misclassified, and questions the decision to headline
The Site’s statement with this source. Beginning with a large number
potentially obscures the individual too: these were people with names.
In March 2019, after a
call by his father requesting police to perform a ‘mental health wellness
check’, 29-year-old Osaze Osagie was shot and killed in his own home in
Pennsylvania: an account of his life in the media mentions ‘autism, paranoid
schizophrenia, extreme anxiety and Asperger’s syndrome’. Some members feel
uncomfortable with these words, as stigmatising in themselves.
In October, 2016,
Deborah Danner was killed in her home in the Bronx by a New York police sergeant,
who claimed she was acting erratically. She was 66 years old. On January 28,
2012, she had written a six page essay entitled ‘Living with Schizophrenia’ (https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/3146953/Living-With-Schizophrenia-by-Deborah-Danner.pdf) which begins: ‘Any chronic illness is a
curse. Schizophrenia is no different—its only “saving grace”, if you will, is
that as far as I know it’s not a fatal disease’.
Deborah Danner’s essay
contains a definition of stigma from the Merriam-Webster dictionary:
a archaic : a scar left by a hot iron : BRAND b :
a mark of shame or discredit: STAIN <bore
the stigma of madness (mental illness)> c : an identifying mark or
characteristic; specifically: a specific diagnostic sign
of a disease.
She writes: ‘I’ve
included the definition of stigma in this essay because those who practice it
should be reminded of what it means and, conversely, the damage it does to
those it is directed at’.
The Site for
Contemporary Psychoanalysis requires its members to abide by a Code of Ethics,
which contains the following clauses:
2.2.1 A member accepts that a personal prejudice they
knowingly hold about the patient’s
gender, age, colour, race, disability, sexuality, social, economic or immigration status,
lifestyle, religious or cultural beliefs is likely to have an adverse effect on the way they relate
to the patient or to colleagues and others.
2.2.2 A member shall actively
consider the area of diversities and equalities as part of their continuing process of self-enquiry and
professional development.
The Site stands with
Black people, and we affirm in particular our responsibilities as psychoanalysts
concerned with mental health. We acknowledge links between American cases of
police brutality and the death of Kingsley Burrell who died in detention under the Mental Health Act in March 2011,
after being restrained by police at a hospital in Birmingham, UK. We condemn
the killings of Osaze Osagie and Deborah Danner and the killing of George Floyd
on 25 May 2020, and of Rashan Charles, Gareth Myatt and Jimmy Mubenga in our
own country, as violent acts which are the consequence of systemic racism. One
member has advocated powerfully for how this statement has overlooked by its
emphasis on the US all the incidents happening every day in the UK.
Furthermore we
recognise that there is a need to challenge and confront racism in the life of
our own organisation: our management, clinic, trainings and events, and
strongly to examine how our policies and procedures contribute to structural
racism in the communities in which we work, including psychoanalysis more
broadly, so that changes can be made. We also stand with the UKCP’s statement
on racial injustice, which can be accessed here: https://www.psychotherapy.org.uk/ukcp-news/midweek-mindset/ukcp-statement-racial-injustice/ .
Site Council
26 June, 2020
by Andie Newman | Jun 20, 2020 | Uncategorized
Site Members and Trainees are offering free or low cost therapy or reflective supervision to NHS workers, care workers, and key workers. Contact: email SiteClinic@yahoo.com or phone 07765 007295
Also, if you are affected more broadly by the Covid-19 pandemic and are considering psychotherapy, please contact us via our Clinic, email SiteClinic@yahoo.com or phone 07765 007295 or via contact details on Member and Trainee webpages.
by Andie Newman | Jun 21, 2019 | Uncategorized
On the 11th April 2019, the SITE hosted a conversation between SITE member, psychoanalyst and author, Jane Haynes, and leading Proust scholar, Christopher Prendergast. You can watch their conversation here
by Andie Newman | Mar 22, 2018 | Uncategorized
Social, Political, and Philosophical Perspectives on Contemporary Psychoanalysis and its Institutions
How did the past produce psychoanalysis? How do psychoanalytic institutions co-produce the present? How will psychoanalysts help to construct the future? Psychoanalytic theory is often mobilised to analyse political discourse, or to explain the reasons behind historical events, implicitly elevating psychoanalysis to a position outside of politics and history. In this series of three panel discussions in Jan-Feb 2018, the SITE brought political theorists, sorcerers, philosophers and activists into conversation with practicing analysts, to put the spotlight on the historical and political context of psychoanalysis itself.
[To play, click on the bottom left corner of the box]