Sunteți pe pagina 1din 4

Journe scientifique organise par lAIHP et le Centre de Psychanalyse et Psychothrapie Evelyne et Jean Kestemberg Les Centres de traitements psychanalytiques

dans leur histoire


Samedi 21 mars 2009 Salle Ren Diatkine ASM13 76, Av. Edison Paris 75013

Argument
Ds 1910, bien avant le dsastre de la Premire guerre mondiale, Freud avait prvu que la conscience sociale allait se rveiller et rappeler la socit que les patients "pauvres" avaient les mmes droits la sant mentale quaux soins de chirurgie. La socit devait reconnatre que la nvrose tait aussi dangereuse que la tuberculose et quelle mritait un traitement quivalent. Cependant il a fallu le traumatisme de la Grande Guerre et limplication active des premiers psychanalystes dans le traitement de ce quon appelait alors les "nvroses de guerre" pour que les Etats sintressent la psychothrapie psychanalytique et surtout son exercice public, en envisageant louverture de dispensaires publics. Le premier devait ouvrir Budapest, mais le cours des vnements politiques, qui avait dans un premier temps favoris ce projet, a empch sa ralisation. Berlin est alors devenu au dbut des annes 1920 le centre dune activit psychanalytique clinique gratuite avec louverture de la Poliklinik. Peu aprs, Vienne, la clinique de "lAmbulatorium" sest rendue clbre. En France, il a fallu attendre laprs-coup de la deuxime guerre mondiale pour voir louverture du Centre des Consultations et Traitements Psychanalytiques (CCTP) en 1954, puis du Centre de Psychanalyse et de Psychothrapie du 13me arrondissement dans les annes 1960. Le traitement psychanalytique des enfants a connu des progrs analogues dans des centres spcialiss tel que lInstitut Edouard Claparde. Notre colloque scientifique vise retracer lhistoire de ces differents Centres de traitements psychanalytiques, de comparer leur volution et de mettre en vidence leur spcificit. Lambition du colloque nest pas de faire un inventaire de tous les Centres o la psychanalyse constitue la rfrence thorique, mais de donner un axe historique qui permette une rflexion et ouvre un dbat partir de lexprience clinique. Des enseignements trs diffrents sont issus de chaque exprience. Lhistoire de mouvement psychanalytique est dj riche des expriences cliniques auxquelles cette journe est consacre. Progressivement dautres Centres connaissent le jour et nous esprons les tudier prochainement. LAIHP ne peut que contribuer ltude dune histoire en mouvement.

Programme
9H Accueil des participants 9H30-12H Table Ronde Prsident de sance : Alain de Mijolla (Fondateur et Prsident honoraire AIHP) Modrateurs : Franoise Moggio (Directrice du Centre Alfred Binet) et Alain Gibeault (Directeur du CPPEJK)

Sophie de Mijolla-Mellor (Prsidente de lAIHP) : Ouverture du colloque Nicolas Gougoulis : Une vue densemble Elisabeth Danto : Psychanalyse et justice sociale 1920-1939. LAmbulatorium de Vienne Michelle Moreau-Ricaud : La Poliklinik de Berlin Alain Gibeault : Le Centre de psychanalyse et de psychothrapie Evelyne et Jean Kestemberg 12H-14H Pause djeuner 14H-17H Table Ronde Prsident de sance : Sophie de Mijolla-Mellor (Prsidente de lAIHP) Modrateurs : Vassilis Kapsamblis (Directeur gnral ASM13) et Jean-Luc Donnet (ancien Mdecin-directeur du Centre Jean Favreau) Jean-Louis Baldacci : Le Centre de consultations et de traitements psychanalytiques Jean Favreau Dominique Arnoux : LInstitut Edouard Claparde Marie-Claude Fusco et Jacqueline Morisi : Le Centre de Psychothrapie Psychanalytique Victor Smirnoff Paulette Letarte et Genevive Welsh : Les Consultations et supervisions psychanalytiques la CMME Diran Donabdian : LInstitut de Psychosomatique de Paris 17H-17H30 Pause 17h30-18h30 Discussion gnrale avec la salle Prsident de sance : Jacques Sdat (Vice-prsident AIHP) 18h30 Nicolas Gougoulis : Clture du colloque Psychoanalysis &History, 2007 by Nicolas Gougoulis Summary: The article reviews the book "Freud's Free Clinics: Psychoanalysis and Social Justice 19181938," by Elizabeth Ann Danto. Excerpt from Article:

Reviews: Freud's Free Clinics Freud's Free Clinics: Psychoanalysis and Social Justice, 1918-1938 by Elizabeth Danto (New York: Columbia University Press, 2005; 352 pp; $29.50); reviewed by Nicolas Gougoulis After years of 'Freud bashing' it has become a common belief that psychoanalysis is an outdated clinical method that relied on the treatment of wealthy patients. Recent publications on Freud's clinical work tend to highlight this social aspect (Brody 1970; Lynn & Vaillant 1998 for negative readings, or even Lohser & Newton 1996 and Roazen 1995 for more favourable attitudes). Furthermore psychoanalysts themselves are seen as conservative practitioners without social engagement. We all know how false these ideas are but it is not always easy to prove a better point. And here comes a book based on fine research, drawing from new interview and archival material that not only challenges the attacks on analytical social positioning but gives a vivid picture of the 'Zeitgeist' and life in Vienna and Berlin during the revolutionary period 1918-1938. Elizabeth Danto, Professor of Practice Sequence at the Hunter College School of Social Work at New York, teaches social welfare policy and human development. So her interests were focused more on the social implication of psychoanalytic work and less on theoretical developments. I met her in Paris when she was doing part of her research and remember her surprise when I explained the work of the Jean Favreau Centre for psychoanalytic and psychotherapeutic treatment (Gougoulis 2006), unknown to Englishspeaking researchers. At the time she had already published her papers on the Ambulatorium of Vienna and the Berlin Poliklinik (Danto 1998,1999). Elizabeth Danto gives us a clear picture of Red Vienna and the consequences of some early Freudian ideas on psychic welfare. Need we be reminded that in 1918, after the disaster of World War I, Freud foresaw that 'the conscience of society will awake and remind it that the poor man should have just as much right to assistance for his mind as he now has to the lifesaving help offered by surgery; and that the neuroses threaten public health no less than tuberculosis.' (Freud 1910). It is also in the aftermath of the first great disaster and the active involvement of the psychoanalysts on the war front and their successes in the treatment of the 'war neuroses' (a predecessor of today's PTSD) that brought state interest in psychoanalysis. The NICOLAS GOUGOULIS MD is Senior psychiatrist of the French National Health system (Psychiatre des hopitaux), psychoanalyst, member of the board of the Societe Psychanalytique de Paris, Director of the Department of History and Archives of the SPP and scientific secretary of the lAHP Address for correspondence: 31 Rue Jean Dolent, Paris 75014. [email: nico.gougoulis@wanadoo.fr] Gougoulis

Nicolas
31 Rue Jean Dolent, 75014 Paris (Paris) Tl.: 0143369655

Psychoanalysis and History 9(2), 2007 (c) The author 233

S-ar putea să vă placă și