The Institute of Psychoanalysis
welcomes enquiries from the media and can provide media
professionals with a quick and authoritative response.
Specialist spokespeople are available to comment on psychoanalytic
matters but also on many wider issues affecting society today, from
young people’s issues such as self-harm and eating disorders,
personal issues such as relationships and sexuality, violence and
problem behaviour.
They can also offer a psychoanalytic perspective on aspects of
contemporary culture such as arts, literature and film.
See full
details of our spokespeople
Media researchers may also make use of the Institute’s
archive and
library, a rich research resource including the works of many
significant figures in the field and 22,000 volumes from the mid
19th century to the present.
See more information about the Institute
Find out more about Psychoanalysis
Contact Details
For media enquiries or to arrange interviews, contact:
Ginette Goulston Lincoln
Tel:
07958 448002, 020 7923 0807
ginette@goulston-lincoln.com
Caroline Graty
Tel:
07984 911913
carolinegraty@mac.com
Or call The Institute of Psychoanalysis
Tel: 020 7563 5000
Specialist Spokespeople
Our experts are available to interview on a wide range of
contemporary issues. To arrange interviews contact
Ginette Goulston
Lincoln
or
Caroline Graty
(contact details above)
or call the
Institute of Psychoanalysis
on 020 7563 5000
Dr Robin Anderson
is a Fellow of the Institute of Psychoanalysis and
a consultant child and adolescent psychiatrist. He was formally head
of the Adolescent Department at the Tavistock Clinic. He works in
private practice in psychoanalysis and psychotherapy for children
and adults, is a Visiting Lecturer at the Tavistock Clinic and
provides a consultancy to adolescent services.
Specialist areas:
Issues involving children and young people, in
particular the assessment and treatment of children and young people
following abuse, neglect or post-adoption. Neurotic and behavioural
disorders in young people such as suicide, self-harm and eating
disorders. Adolescent development and its problems. Counselling
parents of disturbed children or adolescents. Problems of providing
psychoanalytic treatment in the public sector. Ethical issues in
psychoanalytic treatments.
David Bell
has a background in psychology, psychiatry and
psychoanalysis. A practicing adult psychiatrist and psychoanalyst,
and a Fellow of the Institute of Psychoanalysis, he is director of Fitzjohn’s Unit a specialist unit for serious
psychological disorders at the Tavistock Clinic. He lectures and
writes extensively on a variety of subjects including psychosis,
personality disorder, suicide, trauma and psychoanalytic
perspectives on culture and politics. He is a training and
supervising analyst, and Chair of the Scientific
Committee of the British Psychoanalytic Society; he also chairs a study
group on philosophy and psychoanalysis.
Specialist areas:
General psychoanalysis, mental illness, suicide,
personality disorder, NHS and the public sector, the debate
psychoanalysis vs cognitive behavioural therapy. The relationship
between psychoanalysis and culture (film, literature, theatre),
philosophy, Freud, psychoanalysis and politics, psychoanalysis and
society, the work of Klein and Bion.
Michael Brearley
has had a varied career including being a
university philosophy lecturer, captain of Middlesex and England
cricket teams, a cricket writer and journalist, and a nursing
assistant at a clinic for disturbed adolescents. He qualified as a
psychoanalyst in 1985, is a Fellow of the Institute of
Psychoanalysis, and now works full-time in private practice in
London.
Specialist areas:
sport, rivalry, leadership, motivation.
Psychoanalysis and literature, psychoanalysis and philosophy.
Rosine Perelberg
is a psychoanalyst working in private practice in
London. She is a training and supervising analyst and a Fellow of the
Institute of Psychoanalysis. She regularly teaches and supervises in
Europe, Latin America and the USA. She lectures in psychoanalytic
theory at University College London, where she also co-ordinates the
Freud Seminars and seminars on sexuality. She has edited
Psychoanalytic Understanding of Violence and Suicide, Dreaming and
Thinking and Time and Memory. She has written Time, Space and Phantasy, to be published in The New Library of Psychoanalysis in
June 2008.
Specialist areas:
borderline psychopathology, hysteria, violence,
sexuality. Dreaming, daydreaming. Psychoanalysis and Latin American
literature.
Andrea Sabbadini
is a Fellow of the Institute of Psychoanalysis and
Honorary Secretary of the British Psychoanalytical Society. He is
the founding editor of
Psychoanalysis and History
and the book
review editor of
The International Journal of Psychoanalysis
and has
published extensively in the major psychoanalytic journals. He has
edited several works on cinema and psychoanalysis and is chair of
the European Psychoanalytic Film Festival and of a programme of
films and discussions at the ICA. He works as a psychoanalyst and
supervisor in London, as well as lecturing at University College
London and Regent’s College.
Specialist areas:
psychoanalysis and cinema, the history of
psychoanalysis.
Philip Stokoe
is a psychoanalyst in private practice and a Fellow of the Institute
of Psychoanalysis. He is Clinical
Director of the Adult Department of the Tavistock & Portman NHS
Foundation Trust and a consultant for a wide range of organisations.
Specialist areas:
psychoanalytic work in the NHS and public sector,
work with personality disorder, couples and relationships,
adolescents, parenting. The application of psychoanalysis, e.g. in
organisations and institutions, management, training for front line
workers (nurses, social workers etc), politics and current affairs,
art and theatre.
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