Hester McFarland Solomon | |
---|---|
Born | Hester Madeleine McFarland 11 February 1943 |
Died | 5 October 2021 London |
Burial place | London |
Nationality | American and British |
Alma mater | Tufts University, Massachusetts |
Occupation | Analytical psychologist |
Years active | 1977–2021 |
Known for | The as if personality, the ethical attitude |
Hester McFarland Solomon (11 February 1943 - 5 October 2021) was an American-British analytical psychologist, researcher, teacher, and administrator. She sought to bridge the century-old divide between Analytical psychology and the schools of Psychoanalysis. [1] [2] [3]
Hester McFarland, the elder of two children, was born a war baby in New Haven, Connecticut into modest circumstances. Her mother, a nurse, was of recent Polish descent, while her father, Orrin, a small building contractor, came from a Scottish family, mainly of physicians, long settled in the United States. During her early childhood, the family moved from a converted garage into a timber house in the forest, which her father had constructed. She excelled at school and French literature became her chosen subject. The family's budget did not stretch to college fees and she set off to New York City to work as a secretary to finance her desire for further studies. She succeeded in gaining a scholarship to Tufts University, where she majored in French. [4] While there, the Junior Year Abroad Program enabled her to travel to Europe and take courses at the Sorbonne in Paris. It also presented an opportunity to visit London where she met the man who would later become her husband, Jonathan Solomon. [5] Solomon, a Cambridge graduate, would go on to have a distinguished career as a top ranking civil servant during the privatisation of British telecommunications. [4] [6] Having graduated in the early 1960s, Hester McFarland moved to the United Kingdom and marriage. She continued her French studies and obtained a master's degree at King's College London. This was followed by the birth of a son. However her abiding interest in philosophy and in the writings of Carl Jung propelled her into abandoning her French studies and forging instead a career in the application of Analytical psychology. [5]
Solomon entered her clinical career at a propitious time in London when independent analytical societies were recently formed and analysts retained direct links with Jung and his immediate circle. [5] She rose through the ranks of her own society, the British Association of Psychotherapists (later the British Jungian Analytic Association), becoming chair of the Council and a Fellow. [5] Her international connections took her not only to Europe, especially France and Belgium, where she gave papers, [7] but also travel to China and Japan. Her organisational skills were recognised in 2010 by her election, as only the second woman, to the presidency of the Zürich-based International Association for Analytical Psychology. Towards the end of her life, with faltering health, she fostered the running of the amalgamated British Psychotherapy Foundation operating in a competitive independent therapy environment against a declining NHS and economy. [5]
Solomon became a sought after analyst and clinical supervisor in London. [5] Her experience and academic skill were deployed in a number of publications. This was adumbrated already in 1972, when hired in a secretarial capacity by psychiatrist Dr. Jack Kahn for his forthcoming textbook, he acknowledged her as his "co-author" when the work was finally published. [8] This collaboration later led to editing two volumes of collected papers with Elphis Christopher at the turn of the 20th-century and a further joint project with psychoanalyst, Mary Twyman, on the ethics of clinical practice which they argue are common to both analytical psychology and psychoanalysis, despite apparently insurmountable theoretical differences on the nature of the psyche and its hypothetical functioning. [9] Another focus of Solomon's was the type of defences people develop to get through life. One of them she characterised as the as if personality, a type of layered construct to protect the vulnerable true self within. [10] Solomon welcomed the 2009 publication of Jung's long detained Liber Novus as the basis of his clinical theories and to which she devoted much study. [5]
Solomon published her professional papers in:
Carl Gustav Jung was a Swiss psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who founded analytical psychology.
Analytical psychology is a term coined by Carl Jung, a Swiss psychiatrist, to describe research into his new "empirical science" of the psyche. It was designed to distinguish it from Freud's psychoanalytic theories as their seven-year collaboration on psychoanalysis was drawing to an end between 1912 and 1913. The evolution of his science is contained in his monumental opus, the Collected Works, written over sixty years of his lifetime.
Countertransference is defined as redirection of a psychotherapist's feelings toward a client – or, more generally, as a therapist's emotional entanglement with a client.
Depth psychology refers to the practice and research of the science of the unconscious, covering both psychoanalysis and psychology. It is also defined as the psychological theory that explores the relationship between the conscious and the unconscious, as well as the patterns and dynamics of motivation and the mind. The theories of Sigmund Freud, Carl Gustav Jung, and Alfred Adler are all considered its foundations.
Sabina Nikolayevna Spielrein was a Russian physician and one of the first female psychoanalysts. She was in succession the patient, then student, then colleague of Carl Gustav Jung, with whom she had an intimate relationship during 1908–1910, as is documented in their correspondence from the time and her diaries. She also met, corresponded, and had a collegial relationship with Sigmund Freud. She worked with and psychoanalysed Swiss developmental psychologist Jean Piaget. She worked as a psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, teacher and paediatrician in Switzerland and Russia. In a thirty-year professional career, she published over 35 papers in three languages, covering psychoanalysis, developmental psychology, psycholinguistics and educational psychology. Among her works in the field of psychoanalysis is the essay titled "Destruction as the Cause of Coming Into Being", written in German in 1912.
Andrew Samuels is a British psychotherapist and writer on political and social themes from a psychological viewpoint. He has worked with politicians, political organisations, activist groups and members of the public in Europe, US, Brazil, Israel, Japan, Russia and South Africa as a political and organisational consultant. Clinically, Samuels has developed a blend of Jungian and post-Jungian, relational psychoanalytic and humanistic approaches.
Anthony Stevens is a Jungian analyst, psychiatrist and prolific writer of books and articles on psychotherapy, evolutionary psychiatry and the scientific implications of Jung's theory of archetypes. A graduate of Oxford University, where he studied under Carolus Oldfield in the Department of Psychology in the 1950s, Stevens has two degrees in psychology in addition to a research doctorate (MD); during the 1950s Stevens also studied under Oldfield in the Department of Psychology at Reading. He is a member of the Royal College of Psychiatrists and a senior member of the Independent Group of Analytical Psychologists.
Michael Scott Montague Fordham was an English child psychiatrist and Jungian analyst. He was a co-editor of the English translation of C.G. Jung's Collected Works. His clinical and theoretical collaboration with psychoanalysts of the object relations school led him to make significant theoretical contributions to what has become known as 'The London School' of analytical psychology in marked contrast to the approach of the C. G. Jung Institute, Zürich. His pioneering research into infancy and childhood led to a new understanding of the self and its relations with the ego. Part of Fordham's legacy is to have shown that the self in its unifying characteristics can transcend the apparently opposing forces that congregate in it and that while engaged in the struggle, it can be exceedingly disruptive both destructively and creatively.
The British Psychoanalytic Council (BPC) is an association of training institutions and professional associations which have their roots in established psychoanalysis and analytical psychology. They bring together approximately 1500 practitioners of psychoanalytic and psychodynamic psychotherapy who as individuals become registrants of the BPC.
Robert Joseph Langs was a psychiatrist, psychotherapist, and psychoanalyst. He was the author, co-author, or editor of more than forty books on psychotherapy and human psychology. Over the course of more than fifty years, Langs developed a revised version of psychoanalytic psychotherapy, currently known as the "adaptive paradigm". This is a distinctive model of the mind, and particularly of the mind's unconscious component, significantly different from other forms of psychoanalytic and psychodynamic psychotherapy.
Gerhard Adler was a major figure in the world of analytical psychology, known for his translation into English from the original German and editorial work on the Collected Works of Carl Gustav Jung. He also edited C.G. Jung Letters, with Aniela Jaffe. With his wife Hella, he was a founding member of the Society of Analytical Psychology in London, of which C.G. Jung was first President. Despite their years-long collaboration on translating and editing, Adler's allegiance to Jung and the "Zurich school" caused irreconcilable differences with Michael Fordham, and led to his leaving the Society of Analytical Psychology and founding the Association of Jungian Analysts.
Jon Mills is a Canadian philosopher, psychoanalyst, and clinical psychologist. His principle theoretical contributions have been in the philosophy of the unconscious, a critique of psychoanalysis, philosophical psychology, value inquiry, and the philosophy of culture. His clinical contributions are in the areas of attachment pathology, trauma, psychosis, and psychic structure.
Nancy McWilliams, Ph.D., ABPP., is emerita visiting professor at the Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology at Rutgers University. She has written on personality and psychotherapy.
Diana Foșha is a Romanian-American psychologist, known for developing accelerated experiential dynamic psychotherapy (AEDP), and for her work on the psychotherapy of adults suffering the effects of childhood attachment trauma and abuse.
Polly Young-Eisendrath is an American psychologist, author, teacher, speaker, Jungian analyst, Zen Buddhist, and the founder of Dialogue Therapy and Real Dialogue and creator of the podcast Enemies: From War to Wisdom.
Robin S. Brown is a psychoanalyst and academic. His work has been associated with a “philosophical turn” in psychoanalysis, and has received interdisciplinary attention in the fields of psychoanalysis, analytical psychology, and transpersonal psychology. He is the recipient of an award from the American Board and Academy of Psychoanalysis for his book, Psychoanalysis Beyond the End of Metaphysics: Thinking Towards the Post-Relational (Routledge). Joseph Cambray, president of the International Association of Analytical Psychology, described the book as: "A powerful, incisive critical analysis of the state of contemporary psychoanalysis"; while Lewis Aron referred to the book as "a penetrating and sophisticated critique"
The Society of Analytical Psychology, known also as the SAP, incorporated in London, England, in 1945 is the oldest training organisation for Jungian analysts in the United Kingdom. Its first Honorary President in 1946 was Carl Jung. The Society was established to professionalise and develop Analytical psychology in the UK by providing training to candidates, offering psychotherapy to the public through the C.G. Jung Clinic and conducting research. By the mid 1970s the Society had established a child-focused service and training. The SAP is a member society of the International Association for Analytical Psychology and is regulated by the British Psychoanalytic Council.
The British Psychotherapy Foundation, Bpf, is the successor organisation to three former long-established British psychotherapy providers and clinical training institutions which merged in April 2013. The original constituents are the British Association of Psychotherapists, BAP (1951), The Lincoln Clinic and Centre for Psychotherapy (1968) and the London Centre for Psychotherapy, LCP, (1976). It is unique in the United Kingdom for providing treatment services for children and adults in all the psychoanalytic modalities, that is of Freudian and Jungian inspiration. It is also unique in providing professional training in those modalities within one institution and is regulated by the British Psychoanalytic Council. It has charitable status. Its current associations are:
Stanton Marlan, Ph.D., ABPP, FABP is an American clinical psychologist, Jungian psychoanalyst, author, and educator. Marlan has authored or edited scores of publications in Analytical Psychology and Archetypal Psychology. Three of his more well-known publications are The Black Sun. The Alchemy and Art of Darkness, C. G. Jung and the Alchemical Imagination, and Jung's Alchemical Philosophy. Marlan is also known for his polemics with German Jungian psychoanalyst Wolfgang Giegerich. Marlan co-founded the Pittsburgh Society of Jungian Analysts and was the first director and training coordinator of the C. G. Jung Institute Analyst Training Program of Pittsburgh. Currently, Marlan is in private practice and serves as adjunct professor of Clinical Psychology at Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Louis Maurice Zinkin was a British analytical psychologist. Earlier in life he had been a ship's surgeon, a physician, a child psychiatrist and Consultant Psychotherapist at St George's Hospital, London. He had the distinction of being a Group Analyst alongside individual and couple work and was the author of many papers and books.