Robert Wallerstein: 65 Years at the Center of Psychoanalysis
Video
with
Shelley Nathans, PhD, Robert S. Wallerstein
Video

Robert Wallerstein: 65 Years at the Center of Psychoanalysis

Robert Wallerstein’s distinguished career spanned psychiatry, research, and psychoanalysis, with more than six decades at the center of the psychoanalytic field. In this illuminating interview, he recounts his early life, illustrious career, and the sweeping changes psychoanalysis endured throughout the 20th century.   Video length: 1h 22m
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Overview

Psychoanalysis suffers from a relative dearth of personal video interviews—particularly of luminaries reflecting on the field’s tumultuous evolution. Covering the days of Freud to musings on the future, this expansive interview will satisfy your desire for tales of the field’s rich history, political intrigue, and cultural depth, as told by the renowned Robert Wallerstein. Here, you’ll get an inside peek at the development of modern psychoanalysis from a man who entered the field during World War II, led research at the original Menninger Clinic, and presided over the International Psychoanalytical Association during the 1992 lawsuit that opened the field to a new generation of clinicians.

Interviewed by Dr. Shelley Nathans in the year before his passing, Wallerstein describes his early life in Depression-era New York City, where he moved with his mother at age 2 from Berlin. Intellectually sharp even into his 90s, he recounts his parents’ individual and marital struggles, his time in Mexico City as a teen, meeting his future wife, Judith—later a celebrated researcher in her own right—as a Columbia undergrad, and his tenure in WWII, complete with an overview of the analyst exodus from Europe and the internal controversies surrounding it.

Wallerstein continues to compel with anecdotes of the early days with Karl Menninger, a midcentury analytic field that shunned “deviants” such as Kohut and Klein, and the continuing divide over training requirements that threatened to split APSA from the international community. You’ll get nuggets of insight on the rift between Anna Freud and Margaret Mahler and the latter’s rift with Erikson, and you’ll hear about Wallerstein’s early-’80s investigation of the Rio de Janeiro Psychoanalytic Institute, which played a role in the torture of political prisoners.

Both riveting and resonant, this video offers an accessible window into psychoanalysis from a pioneer with a wide-ranging career and a lasting impact on the field. If you’re interested in the history psychoanalysis, be sure to take a look.

About the Experts

Shelley Nathans, PhD
Expert

Shelley Nathans, PhD

Shelley Nathans, PhD, (filmmaker) is a clinical psychologist and has 30 years of experience as an individual and couple psychotherapist, She is a member of the teaching faculty at the California Pacific Medical Center in the Department of Psychiatry. She has completed the Tavistock Center for Couple Relations Advanced Training in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy with Couples, is a faculty member of the Psychoanalytic Couple Psychotherapy Group study program, is on the International Advisory Board for the Journal, Psychoanalytic Couple and Family…

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Robert S. Wallerstein
Expert

Robert S. Wallerstein

Robert S. Wallerstein (January 28, 1921 – December 21, 2014) was a prominent German born American psychoanalyst. He trained at the Menninger Foundation in Topeka, Kansas, rising to become the foundation’s director of research and conducting a pioneering study called the Psychotherapy Research Project. He moved to the Bay Area in 1966 as the chief of psychiatry at Mount Zion Hospital, then joined the faculty of the UCSF Department of Psychiatry as a professor. Wallerstein served as department chair and director…

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Disclosures

Shelley Nathans and Robert S. Wallerstein was compensated for his contribution. None of his books or additional offerings are required for any of the Psychotherapy.net content. Should such materials be referenced, it is as an additional resource.

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