This book explores the impact of migration, including its causes, upon the key ideas and directions of psychoanalytic theory and practice from the 20th Century until today.
Adrienne E. Harris is faculty and supervisor at both New York University and the Psychoanalytic Institute of Northern California as well as being an editor of Psychoanalytic Dialogues, and Studies in Gender and Sexuality
Introduction Part 1 1. Émigré Analysts and the Transformation of Psychoanalysis in America 2. Émigré Psychoanalysis in the Age of McCarthyism 3. The Saga of the Budapest School of Psychoanalysis: Double Exile 4. Help, Health, Husbands, and Hutzpah: The Lives of Five Women Analysts Part 2 5. The Holocaust and Contemporary Psychoanalysis in America 6. Liberalism, Populism, and Mass Psychology 7. Religion, Antisemitism, the Émigré Analysts, and Parallels to Our Time Part 3 8. The Exile Within 9. Working with the Frontiers: the IPA as a Protective Link 10. Reframing Early Interventions for Refugee Populations: The Importance of Emergency Medicine in Early Detection and Delivery of Mental Healthcare