Synopses & Reviews
These essays provide both an overview of Bruno Bettelheim's contributions to psychoanalysis and education and a reflection on present issues confronting child psychiatry, education, and the social sciences. It will point to new directions for scholarly study and psychoanalytic intervention.
Synopsis
Although Bruno Bettelheim died before this book was finished, he was presentatitsbirth. In1985, wefeltwewantedtogivehimagiftforwhathe taught us: how to think criticallyabout ourselvesand our society; how to inform our emotions; how to move from self-knowledge to empathy for others, andhowwithsuchempathy, intum, toenrichandexpandourself- knowledge; and most important, how to integrate a sense of personal autonomy with a sense of responsible living with one's community. For many of us, he was our Socrates. His best, most lively teaching was in the presence of a group of questioning, intellectually hungry students. We sought simpleanswers to our life problems, or those ofour patients. He would press us, insisting that wenotsettlefor stock phrases. Thefirst place to learn was from within. He seemed to thrive on teaching those who were prepared to follow his example of demanding self- examination, often a painful process, with felt reasoning that could result in an informed heart. Bettelheim treasured the written word. Fortunately, unlike Socrates, and despite believing that the bestlearningcomes dialectically, he wrote.
Table of Contents
The Individual and Society's Institutions (N.M. Szajnberg). Psychoanalysis and the Classroom (B. Cohler, R. GalatzerLevy). A History of Milieu in the Residential Treatment of Children and Youth (J. Noshpitz). Orthodoxy and Heresy in the History of Psychoanalysis (E. Frattaroli). Bettelheim's Contribution to Anthropology (R. Paul). From the Orthogenic School to the Reservation (R. Bergman). Secrecy and Privacy in a Psychodynamic Milieu (N.M. Szajnberg). Index.