Enabling and Inspiring: A Tribute to Martha Harris
Martha Harris (1919-1987) was one of the most influential and also one of the most loved psychoanalysts of the generation that trained with Melanie Klein. She also worked with Wilfred Bion, and wrote many books and papers on psychoanalytic training and child development. Her colleague James Gammill cites Mrs Klein as saying: She is one of the best people I have ever known for the psychoanalysis of children ... and she has a mind of her own. Harris was responsible for the child psychotherapy training at the Tavistock Clinic from 1960 onwards, developing laterally the method founded on infant observation that had been put in place by Esther Bick. She established cross-clinic work discussion groups, a pioneering schools' counselling course (in collaboration with her husband Roland Harris), and individual work with disturbed children in the school environment. Her belief that psychoanalytic ideas could and should travel, both geographically and across the professions, led to her seeding the Tavi Model in many other countries through regular teaching trips, in company with her later husband Donald Meltzer. Her influence was not as a theorist, but as a teacher with an extraordinary capacity to engage processes of introjective learning in both students and readers. This tribute by some of those who studied with her is not simply testimony to a remarkable teacher and clinician whose wisdom has been rarely equalled; it also offers inspiration to others who may be struggling to find ways of using psychoanalytic ideas imaginatively in a variety of contexts - clinical, social or scholarly - in what can at times appear to be an unreceptive world.
1119232837
Enabling and Inspiring: A Tribute to Martha Harris
Martha Harris (1919-1987) was one of the most influential and also one of the most loved psychoanalysts of the generation that trained with Melanie Klein. She also worked with Wilfred Bion, and wrote many books and papers on psychoanalytic training and child development. Her colleague James Gammill cites Mrs Klein as saying: She is one of the best people I have ever known for the psychoanalysis of children ... and she has a mind of her own. Harris was responsible for the child psychotherapy training at the Tavistock Clinic from 1960 onwards, developing laterally the method founded on infant observation that had been put in place by Esther Bick. She established cross-clinic work discussion groups, a pioneering schools' counselling course (in collaboration with her husband Roland Harris), and individual work with disturbed children in the school environment. Her belief that psychoanalytic ideas could and should travel, both geographically and across the professions, led to her seeding the Tavi Model in many other countries through regular teaching trips, in company with her later husband Donald Meltzer. Her influence was not as a theorist, but as a teacher with an extraordinary capacity to engage processes of introjective learning in both students and readers. This tribute by some of those who studied with her is not simply testimony to a remarkable teacher and clinician whose wisdom has been rarely equalled; it also offers inspiration to others who may be struggling to find ways of using psychoanalytic ideas imaginatively in a variety of contexts - clinical, social or scholarly - in what can at times appear to be an unreceptive world.
40.95 In Stock
Enabling and Inspiring: A Tribute to Martha Harris

Enabling and Inspiring: A Tribute to Martha Harris

Enabling and Inspiring: A Tribute to Martha Harris

Enabling and Inspiring: A Tribute to Martha Harris

Paperback

$40.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Martha Harris (1919-1987) was one of the most influential and also one of the most loved psychoanalysts of the generation that trained with Melanie Klein. She also worked with Wilfred Bion, and wrote many books and papers on psychoanalytic training and child development. Her colleague James Gammill cites Mrs Klein as saying: She is one of the best people I have ever known for the psychoanalysis of children ... and she has a mind of her own. Harris was responsible for the child psychotherapy training at the Tavistock Clinic from 1960 onwards, developing laterally the method founded on infant observation that had been put in place by Esther Bick. She established cross-clinic work discussion groups, a pioneering schools' counselling course (in collaboration with her husband Roland Harris), and individual work with disturbed children in the school environment. Her belief that psychoanalytic ideas could and should travel, both geographically and across the professions, led to her seeding the Tavi Model in many other countries through regular teaching trips, in company with her later husband Donald Meltzer. Her influence was not as a theorist, but as a teacher with an extraordinary capacity to engage processes of introjective learning in both students and readers. This tribute by some of those who studied with her is not simply testimony to a remarkable teacher and clinician whose wisdom has been rarely equalled; it also offers inspiration to others who may be struggling to find ways of using psychoanalytic ideas imaginatively in a variety of contexts - clinical, social or scholarly - in what can at times appear to be an unreceptive world.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781780491066
Publisher: Karnac Books
Publication date: 09/30/2012
Pages: 368
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Meg Harris Williams, a writer and artist, studied English at the Universities of Cambridge and Oxford and art at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence, and has had a lifelong psychoanalytic education, working closely with Donald Meltzer. She has written and lectured extensively in the UK and abroad on psychoanalysis and literature. She is a visiting lecturer for AGIP and at the Tavistock Centre in London, and an Honorary Member of the Psychoanalytic Center of California. She is married with four children and lives in Farnham, Surrey.

Table of Contents

Preface  Meg Harris Williams PART I - IN ENGLAND AND ABROAD  1. Mattie at work  Gianna Polacco Williams 2. Mattie as an educator  Margaret Rustin 3. Mattie's teaching methods  Ann Cebon 4. Mattie's contribution to the study of infant observation  Janine Sternberg 5. A psychoanalytic revolution from a speculative to an empirical point of view  Didier Houzel 6. The role of Martha Harris from the beginning of the GERPEN  James Gammill 7. Martha Harris: an indelible creative memory  Carlo Brutti and Rita Parlani Brutti 8. Made in Hampstead and exported throughout the world: Germany and Austria  Ross A. Lazar 9. Mattie in Bombay  Sarosh Forbes 10. Turning points enabled by Martha Harris  Marja Schulman 11. Growing points and the role of observation  Meg Harris Williams PART II - CLINICAL WORK AND SUPERVISION  12. The experience of supervision  Catrin Bradley 13. Mattie as "maternal container" for a trainee  Evanthe Blandy 14. A glimpse of prenatal life  Romana Negri 15. Assessment of a little girl and her parents  Simona Nissim 16. Supervision of a five year old boy  Andrea Watson 17. Revisiting some lessons learned from Martha Harris  Dina Vallino 18. Reminiscences of an infant observation with Martha Harris  Angela Goyena 19. Family consultations in the footsteps of Martha Harris with toddlers at risk of autism  Maria Rhode PART III - PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS  20. Shorter recollections  Gabrielle Crockatt, Helene Dubinsky, Ellen Jaffe, Judy Shuttleworth, Brian Truckle, Eleanor Wigglesworth, Ricky Emanuel, Katherine Arnold, Herbert Chaim Hahn, Carlo Papuzza, Maria Pozzi, Renata Li Causi, Torhild Leira, Eve Steel 21. Memories of Mattie  Valerie Sinason 22. Mattie's legacy  Asha Phillips 23. Mattie on maternal containment  Anne Alvarez 24. Baptism under fire: finding my feet as a child psychotherapist  Caroline Gluckman 25. On becoming a psychotherapist  Margot Waddell 26. Remembering Mattie  Alessandra Piontelli 27. Personal recollections of learning from Mattie Harris  Pamela Sorensen 28. Mattie's house: a memoir  Selina Sella Marsoni 29. A tribute to Mattie  Patricia Kenwood Postscript: among schoolchildren  Meg Harris Williams Appendix: Portrait of Mattie  Donald Meltzer References Name index Subject index
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews