Reprints and typescripts; related notes by Milner.
104mm x 165mm.
Correspondence concerning publications and the affairs of the Society, Institute And Clinic.
A set of lecture notes entitled, 'The psycho-analytical contribution to psychiatry', for lectures given at the Institute of Psychoanalysis, Jan-Mar 1928. Also included are a chart entitled, 'A table of psychic or mechanisms shown no relation to mental disorders (1926)' and a form regarding lecture fees.
John Rickman's writings and lectures on psychoanalysis and other subjects, plus papers and correspondence related to his professional activities, including military service during the Second World War.
A large proportion of the collection relates to Rickman's publications, including his papers, reviews and lectures, as well as the papers of the editors who published his papers posthumously. In addition there is material related to his work with the British Psychoanalytical Society and British Psychological Society, as well as his psychiatric work during military service during the Second World War, his post-war activities and his work with the Peckham Pioneer Health Centre. The collection also contains professional correspondence with colleagues including Wilfred Bion, Sándor Ferenczi and Géza Róheim and correspondence regarding the emigration of European analysts prior to and during the Second World War. Also included are cuttings albums, notebooks and photographs of Rickman and colleagues.
Tyepscript paper entitled 'Patient-Centered and Analyst-Centered Interpretations: Technical Impliactions of 'Containment' and 'Countertransference''.
Letters and newspaper cuttings.
Letters prior to 1939 are from Jones' mother, father, sisters and step-mother, covering personal topics including expressing pride in his achievements, wishing him luck in his travels and sending congratulations on his marriage to Kitty. There is a photograph postcard featuring, presumably, the Jones family at a garden picnic.
Also included are two notes and a handmade Christmas card from Jones' young children and later letters from Mervyn Jones which include comments on Jones' biography of Freud.
Typescript paper ‘Bridges from Everyday-land to the Phanciful Isles of Psychoanalysis’.