Wilfred Bion: newly rediscovered footage

Video footage has recently been rediscovered of Wilfred Bion's seminars at the Tavistock Centre, dating back to the mid- to late-1970s.

Here is a taster, which presents Bion addressing his audience in 1977.\u200B

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Video footage has recently been rediscovered of Wilfred Bion's seminars at the Tavistock Centre, dating back to the mid- to late-1970s.

Here is a taster, which presents Bion addressing his audience in 1977.

Human canvas

\u200BDr. Paul Magee, Associate Professor of Poetry at The University of Canberra, presents 'Human Canvas', an in-depth review of Invention in the Real: Papers of the Freudian School of Melbourne, edited by Linda Clifton (Karnac Books, 2012).

Among others, the points raised by Dr. Magee include:
  • Lacan and the question of tradition and authority;
  • issues concerning child analysis;
  • the status of translated texts and the analysis of art.
Download and view: 'Human Canvas' by Dr. Paul Magee [PDF file, 84Kb].\u200B

\u200B

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Dr. Paul Magee, Associate Professor of Poetry at The University of Canberra, presents 'Human Canvas', an in-depth review of Invention in the Real: Papers of the Freudian School of Melbourne, edited by Linda Clifton (Karnac Books, 2012).

Among others, the points raised by Dr. Magee include:
  • Lacan and the question of tradition and authority;
  • issues concerning child analysis;
  • the status of translated texts and the analysis of art.
Download and view: 'Human Canvas' by Dr. Paul Magee [PDF file, 84Kb].

The sound of Sigmund Freud

This is the only known audio recording of Sigmund Freud, made by the BBC and broadcast in December, 1938. Freud was ill with throat cancer at the time. A transcript of his words is supplied below.

I started my professional activity as a neurologist trying to bring relief to my neurotic patients. Under the influence of an older friend and by my own efforts, I discovered some important new facts about the unconscious in psychic life, the role of instinctual urges, and so on. Out of these findings grew a new science, psychoanalysis, a part of psychology, and a new method of treatment of the neuroses. I had to pay heavily for this bit of good luck. People did not believe in my facts and thought my theories unsavory. Resistance was strong and unrelenting. In the end I succeeded in acquiring pupils and building up an International Psychoanalytic Association. But the struggle is not yet over.
— Sigmund Freud

Foreshocks of the mind

John Michael Greer, whose powerful new book explores the psychological and social consequences of the peak oil crisis (Not the Future We Ordered) reflects on how signs of catastrophic upheaval often firstly manifest in the minds of individuals.