Showing 3307 results

Archival description
Joseph J Michaels
GB BPASA P41-C-34 · Item · 1966
Part of Ilse Hellman collection

Copy of a paper written with Mollie L Schoenberg entitled 'Some Considerations of a Retirement for Training Analysts'.

Joseph Sandler
GB BPASA P41-C-44 · Item · 1969-1979
Part of Ilse Hellman collection

'New Perspectives on the Negative Therapeutic Reaction', 1979; 'Notes on some Theoretical and Clinical Aspects of Transference', 1969.

Joseph Sandler
GB BPASA P16-B-19 · File · 1963-1975
Part of William Gillespie collection

Three papers. The earliest, co-authored by Sandler, Alex Holder and Dale Meers, is entitled 'The ego ideal and the ideal self' and was presented to the British Psychoanalytical Society on 6 Mar 1963. Also 'Counter-transference and role-responsiveness', which was presented at the English-Speaking Conference of the British Psychoanalytical Society in Sep 1974, and 'Dreams, unconscious fantasies and 'identity of perception'', described as a version of the Freud Lecture of the Sigmund Freud Gesellschaft, Vienna, 6 May 1975.

Joseph Sandler
GB BPASA P39-E-57 · Item · 1963-1989
Part of Dinora Pines collection

Typescript copy of a paper written with Alex Holder and Dale Meers entitled 'The Ego Ideal and the Ideal Self', 1963; 'Uncorrected draft' of a paper entitled 'Countertransference and Role-responsiveness', 1974; summary of a paper written with Anna Ursula Dreher and Sibylle Drews entitled ''Psychic trauma - a concept seen in its relation to theory and practice', [1980s?].

Joseph Sandler
GB BPASA P01-D-D-2 · File · 1957-1963
Part of Marion Milner collection

Typescript papers headed ‘Psychosomatic Pathology’, 1957; ‘On the Concept of Superego’, 1960; ‘The Hampstead Index’; ‘Aspects of the Metapsychology of Phantasy’, 1962; ‘The Ego Ideal and the Ideal Self’; ‘On Internal Object Relationships’.

Joseph Sandler
GB BPASA P21-A-D-4 · Item · 1957
Part of Sylvia Payne collection

Handwritten response, apparently to Sandler's paper 'Psychosomatic pathology', which was presented and discussed at the Society on 1 May 1957.