{"id":16239,"date":"2025-04-19T10:09:39","date_gmt":"2025-04-19T17:09:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/?p=16239"},"modified":"2025-04-19T10:09:40","modified_gmt":"2025-04-19T17:09:40","slug":"the-social-turn-harpers-magazine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/?p=16239","title":{"rendered":"&#8220;The Social Turn&#8221;, Harper&#8217;s Magazine"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Psychoanalysis at an inflection point<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>by\u00a0<strong><a href=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/author\/maggiedoherty\/\">Maggie Doherty<\/a><\/strong>, April 2025 Issue<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On the morning of February 2, 2023, I exited the subway at 57th Street to find the air growing colder. It had been a warm winter. But the first proper cold front was moving in, and I already felt underdressed. I propelled myself toward the warmth of the Midtown Hilton, where the American Psychoanalytic Association (APsA, as it\u2019s styled) was gathering for its winter\u00a0meeting.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/CUT_13-2400.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"2400\" height=\"1455\" srcset=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/CUT_13-2400.jpg 2400w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/CUT_13-2400-300x182.jpg 300w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/CUT_13-2400-1124x681.jpg 1124w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/CUT_13-2400-768x466.jpg 768w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/CUT_13-2400-1536x931.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/harpers.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/CUT_13-2400-2048x1242.jpg 2048w\"><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p id=\"caption-attachment-292079\"><em>Strange Shadows (Shadow and Substance)<\/em>, 1950, a painting by Gertrude Abercrombie, from the book\u00a0<em>Gertrude Abercrombie: The Whole World Is a Mystery<\/em>, which was published by DelMonico Books. Courtesy D.A.P.; Private Collection, Illinois<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>APsA has long been the institutional center of psychoanalysis in the United States. Founded in Baltimore in 1911 by, among others, Ernest Jones, Freud\u2019s first biographer, its goals were to consolidate the profession and to standardize both training and treatment. Since then, the organization has overseen virtually every aspect of mainstream psychoanalysis in this country\u2014research, education, and practice\u2014and has resisted changes to many of its standards, casting a suspicious eye on analysts who proposed new ideas. In&nbsp;<em>Psycho<\/em><em>analysis: The Impossible Profession,&nbsp;<\/em>Janet Malcolm described APsA as having an \u201ciron hold\u201d over psychoanalysis in the United&nbsp;States.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The annual in-person meeting, which is traditionally held in New York, is an opportunity for far-flung colleagues, used to working in solitude, to interact. It\u2019s also an opportunity to discuss, face-to-face, whether and how their profession might change to meet the historical moment. A second annual meeting, held online in June, would continue discussions started in New York. Many attendees were clinicians, professionals who had completed many years of psychoanalytic training. I was there as a journalist, an interloper, but I was not unfamiliar with psychoanalysis. For six years, I had seen an analyst; I lay on a couch for fifty minutes, four days a week, and I spoke about whatever came to mind: an essay I was writing, a dream I\u2019d had, an irksome meeting with a student, a memory from childhood. In time, and in ways entirely mysterious to me, I became a less reactive, more stable person, someone capable of loving, working, and playing. My treatment had made me curious about psychoanalysis as a profession.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But I was in New York mainly to investigate rumors I\u2019d heard about major changes afoot in the American psychoanalytic community. Psychoanalysis, I\u2019d heard, was modernizing. APsA was opening up to the broader world. There was a push to bring in new members, as well as a rising tide of psychoanalytic work that sought to make analysis more accessible to and effective for people of different stripes. I wanted to understand what these changes meant for clinicians and patients and whether they were being resisted. What would it take for psychoanalysis to&nbsp;change?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>APsA may have an iron hold on the profession, but it has a small fist, I thought, as I counted the people milling about on the hotel\u2019s second floor. It was Thursday, the convention\u2019s third day but only the first with a full slate of panels and discussions, and there were perhaps fifty people present before the afternoon sessions. The crowd seemed old, strikingly so; I saw a lot of gray hair and sensible shoes and the kind of funky jewelry worn by women of a certain age. According to their name tags, many attendees hailed from a few coastal cities: Boston, San Francisco, New York. Almost every person I saw was white. There was a small book exhibit next to a poster display that reminded me of a high school science fair. Representatives from the mental-health treatment center Austen Riggs, advertising in-patient treatment in the Berkshires (more than $70,000 for six weeks), had set up shop just a few steps&nbsp;away.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The sleepy atmosphere, the sparse crowd: it was hard to believe that psychoanalysis had once been central to American culture. From the aftermath of World War&nbsp;II through the mid-Sixties, analysis was seen as a reliable treatment for mental illness. Psychoanalysts sat on the boards of medical schools and chaired departments of psychiatry. Psychoanalytic researchers received government funding. A rosy portrait of the psychoanalyst appeared in the press; journalists themselves entered treatment. The historian Nathan G.&nbsp;Hale&nbsp;Jr.&nbsp;calls this time the golden age of psychoanalysis.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But the golden age didn\u2019t last. In the Sixties, psychoanalysis came under attack from feminists, as well as from advocates of community mental-health services who derided the practice as a luxury for the well-off. Meanwhile, a new generation of physicians and psychiatrists were turning away from psychoanalysis\u2014particularly with the development of what would later be called cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), which was evidence-based and promised concrete results within a set time frame. By the late Seventies and early Eighties, insurance companies largely excluded psychoanalytic treatment on the grounds that it wasn\u2019t evidence-based, and the majority of analysands had to pay out-of-pocket. In 1980, the third edition of the&nbsp;<em>Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders&nbsp;<\/em>purged its pages of psychoanalytic theory, explicitly bringing American psychiatry into a post-psychoanalytic era that was more focused on \u201cbiological\u201d explanations and cures, like drugs. Soon pharmaceutical companies began promising patients that their depression or anxiety could be treated with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, and by the end of the century, mainstream American psychoanalysis could be said to be on the decline\u2014and in&nbsp;crisis.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A quarter century later, little has changed. Despite its recent trendiness\u2014articles about Freud and his followers appear in the popular press with surprising frequency\u2014the practice of psychoanalysis is fairly niche: APsA has around 3,500 members, and there are about 10,000 patients currently in analysis in the United States. (As of 2018, nearly 40&nbsp;million Americans were prescribed at least one antidepressant.) CBT continues to be regarded as the gold standard, and many insurance plans still refuse to cover psychoanalytic treatment. Few people have the time and money to come in for treatment three or more times a week, and most clinicians spend a good deal of their time doing something other than psychoanalysis: they see patients for psychotherapy, or they teach, or they do consulting work in the public or private sectors. In 2023, 56&nbsp;percent of psychoanalysts in APsA were seventy years old or older. It\u2019s no stretch, then, to say that psychoanalysis is dying out. What would it take for the profession to survive? This was one of the implicit questions at the New York meeting, at which institutional changes were to be proposed and new approaches demonstrated.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>That same afternoon, I found Donald Moss\u2014the longtime chair of APsA\u2019s program committee\u2014at a discussion group considering how psychoanalysts might account for social and historical factors while treating patients. An analyst in his late seventies with a rosy complexion and a low, comforting voice, Moss had led this discussion group for many years. His fellow organizers were two practicing clinical psychologists and psychoanalysts: Dorothy Holmes, a professor emerita at George Washington University, who is widely recognized for her pioneering work on race and gender, and Stephen Seligman, on the faculties of the University of California, San Francisco, and New York University. They had invited Usha Tummala-Narra, a professor of counseling, developmental, and educational psychology, to present a case study drawn from her private practice that raised questions about how cultural factors\u2014particularly those related to race and ethnicity\u2014might influence clinical&nbsp;work.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Roughly seventy audience members, most of whom were themselves therapists, listened to Tummala-Narra, an elegant woman wearing an emerald dress, describe several sessions with her patient, whom she had \u201cde-identified\u201d\u2014that is, rendered unrecognizable by omitting personal details. Everyone present had agreed to keep confidential the details of the case. During intermittent pauses in the presentation, participants asked questions. How might the concept of intergenerational trauma apply to the case? How had racism operated on the patient\u2019s desires? But some participants, especially older ones, resisted this approach. A white man who looked to be at least sixty insisted that the patient\u2019s psychic problems had nothing to do with ethnicity; they instead stemmed from the universal need to be loved. Love, he said, \u201ctranscends culture.\u201d Another participant reflected on a patient\u2019s \u201cneed to be understood as singular\u201d\u2014wasn\u2019t there something damaging about viewing a patient as just one among many people who shared an ethnicity, rather than as a unique individual? A third pushed back against the very premise of the discussion group, asking, How much is too much to think about culture? A younger participant responded, saying that he didn\u2019t think it was possible to draw a&nbsp;line.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This debate resembled similar ones taking place in other spaces, from academia to medicine to journalism. It often splits along generational lines. On one side are the defenders of the old ways of doing things, of objectivity, rigor, and the universal human subject. On the other side are those who understand norms as culturally constructed. They often argue that the universal subject is always racially coded and that lived experience produces (or limits) certain forms of knowledge. This second camp usually suggests that the profession needs to find new and more equitable ways to do its&nbsp;work.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The conversation during the discussion group remained decorous, but it was clear there was a lot at stake. Near the end of the session, Holmes acknowledged that the group was violating analytic tradition by attending so closely to the social and the cultural\u2014categories that had historically been seen as beyond the purview of psychoanalysis. For some analysts, violating tradition can be a declaration of war. \u201cEach side really feels that unless their side wins the day,\u201d Moss told me later, \u201cthere\u2019s going to be enormous&nbsp;damage.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Moss and Holmes were at the vanguard of a burgeoning movement: what some called the profession\u2019s \u201csocial turn.\u201d Depending on whom you talked to, the social turn was an old tradition rightfully resurgent, a minor tendency now becoming major, a change necessary to the survival of the profession\u2014or the death knell for psychoanalysis as we know&nbsp;it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Though many proponents of the social turn are experienced analysts\u2014both Holmes and Moss were in their seventies\u2014the approach is particularly attractive to younger clinicians as well as to current analysts in training, who tend to be in their thirties or forties. Many of these clinicians and candidates began psychoanalytic training in part because they wanted to fight for social justice; some had become attuned to inequities while training in social work, while others were drawn to psychoanalysis through exposure to the tradition\u2019s radicals, such as Frantz&nbsp;Fanon.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To understand the social turn, Moss told me during a phone call after the meeting, you must do what an analyst does in the consulting room: go back to the very beginning. \u201cWhen Freud established psychoanalysis, he made a very sharp division between what he called psychic reality and material reality,\u201d he explained. Freud thought that a patient\u2019s hysteria, say, wasn\u2019t primarily caused by the present conditions of that patient\u2019s life but rather by experiences and fantasies in very early childhood, especially those that took place within the nuclear family. These now resided in the patient\u2019s unconscious and contributed to their psychic reality. He was more concerned with the patient\u2019s feelings and fantasies about their experiences than with the experiences themselves. Many other factors shaping the patient\u2019s life\u2014social and historical forces, verifiable facts and experiences, matters of money and race\u2014were left outside the consulting room&nbsp;door.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In some ways, the method Freud developed was a helpful one: it allowed him to bracket questions of \u201cwhat really happened\u201d to his patients during their childhoods for the sake of doing psychoanalytic work of rigor and depth. Many analysts after Freud erected a similar wall, and the consulting room became a kind of sanctuary, for the clinician as well as for the patient. Whatever was going on \u201cout there\u201d\u2014liberation movements, economic depressions, wars\u2014was secondary to what was going on \u201cin here.\u201d At their most extreme, American psychoanalysts were reluctant to discuss external realities; if anything, they encouraged their patients to adjust to&nbsp;them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Moss wanted to increase what he called the \u201cporosity\u201d between psychoanalysis and the social. He had, by his own account, used his position as chair of the program committee to do just that. \u201cWe\u2019ve become responsive to a decades-long critique that we\u2019ve ignored the social and the historical to no one\u2019s benefit,\u201d he told&nbsp;me.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Moss had his allies. One of them was Francisco Gonz\u00e1lez, an analyst based in the Bay Area. When we spoke by phone following the meeting, Gonz\u00e1lez emphasized the importance of collectives to psychoanalysis throughout its history, from Freud\u2019s work in&nbsp;<em>Civilization and Its Discontents<\/em>to the community program that Gonz\u00e1lez himself helped co-found at the Psychoanalytic Institute of Northern California. For Gonz\u00e1lez, the turn to the social was really a return\u2014to a politicized version of psychoanalysis that was present, and even quite prominent, at an earlier moment in the profession\u2019s&nbsp;history.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Others saw the social turn as something new\u2014and dangerous. Some members of APsA feared that psychoanalysts were taking on problems that existing disciplines such as sociology or political theory were better equipped to analyze. Others worried that the social turn would cause analysts to abandon clinical neutrality\u2014the poker-faced suspension of judgment that therapists cultivate\u2014and turn them into \u201cavatars of anti-racism and social justice with each and every patient,\u201d as one Massachusetts-based psychoanalyst put it in a message to APsA\u2019s email list, a forum where analysts debate issues affecting the profession. Still others questioned whether this perspective best served patients, who may be primed to see themselves as victims and their problems as the product of external forces. The analyst\u2019s job, according to some, is to push patients past superficial accounts of their suffering and, ultimately, to empower them to make different choices. This was how analysts could best effect change: not by addressing social problems but by helping one individual at a&nbsp;time.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But some advocates of the social turn insist instead that analysts, as individuals, and psychoanalysis, as an intellectual discipline,&nbsp;<em>can&nbsp;<\/em>effect social change. Beverly Stoute, a psychiatrist and analyst in Atlanta who at the time of the meeting sat on APsA\u2019s executive committee, believes that racial and ethnic violence is \u201c<em>the&nbsp;<\/em>modern question,\u201d and that, with new social and historical approaches, psychoanalysts are becoming better equipped to answer it. She told me that if psychoanalysts can find ways to address this question, they \u201ccould really change the&nbsp;world.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>During the summer of 2020, as the Black Lives Matter movement was flourishing, APsA\u2019s executive committee approached the nonprofit Black Psychoanalysts Speak. Together, the organizations appointed Dorothy Holmes to build and chair an independent group to address race and racism within American psychoanalysis, with funding and administrative support provided by the association. She selected three co-chairs, all eminent clinicians of color: Stoute; Dionne Powell, an analyst at Columbia University and the Psychoanalytic Association of New York; and Anton Hart, an analyst on the faculty at the William Alanson White Institute. Together, they created a commission of twenty-three members and began conducting a systematic study of how issues of race are broached, or not, in psychoanalytic institutions across the&nbsp;country.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On the fourth night of the meeting I attended, more than five hundred people gathered in the hotel\u2019s largest conference room to hear a preview of the results. The crowd seemed noticeably more diverse than at other events. (Later, Stoute said to me, \u201cSo you were in that room. You now know most of the black psychoanalysts in the country.\u201d She estimated that about 0.2&nbsp;percent of analysts in the United States are black.) Holmes, after whom the commission was named, took the podium first. Dressed in a neat red skirt suit, she spoke matter-of-factly about the barriers she had faced as a black woman making her way through graduate and postgraduate study. She was followed by Hart and Powell, who described the commission\u2019s process, then Gonz\u00e1lez and Stoute, who shared some of the results of the surveys they had conducted with candidates at training institutes. They told the audience that, according to the data, racism \u201chas been killing our institutes.\u201d Facing microaggressions and misunderstandings, candidates of color were dropping out or not even enrolling in the first place. The institutes didn\u2019t know how to deal with racial trauma, to the dissatisfaction of candidates and patients alike. Sweeping changes were needed, even if, Stoute suggested, those who ran the institutes were largely resistant to change and those who wanted to change didn\u2019t know&nbsp;how.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>During the question-and-answer period, one white audience member after another spoke. They applauded the commission, though a few alluded to APsA members who might disapprove of the changes that the Holmes Commission\u2019s report, set to be released four and a half months later, would propose. Near the end of the session, a woman who looked to be younger than the average attendee stepped up to the mic. A woman of color, she explained that she had recently dropped out of psychoanalytic training owing to the racism she experienced at the institute where she had been a candidate. When she received the Holmes Commission\u2019s survey, the first thing she felt was rage. \u201cYou just want to take from me,\u201d she said she remembered thinking. \u201cYou just want to pick my brain to help you grow.\u201d But now that she understood the purpose of the survey, she was grateful. As she thanked the panelists for their efforts, her voice&nbsp;broke.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It appeared to be a moment of catharsis, for both the former candidate and for the group. Bad feelings had been aired; mutual understanding seemed to have been reached. Later, Gonz\u00e1lez told me that APsA was changing, at long last, and \u201cthere\u2019s this kind of vibrancy through that&nbsp;change.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The tensions on display at APsA\u2014between flexibility and rigidity, between freedom and repression\u2014date to the dawn of psychoanalysis and were present, too, in its founder. If Freud defined psychoanalysis with a clear set of rules and criticized the \u201cwild\u201d version practiced by doctors untrained in his method, he also sometimes encouraged experimentation. In 1918, he imagined that a democratizing turn in the world would loosen the strictures he\u2019d placed on psychoanalysis. In this \u201cfantastic\u201d future, outpatient mental-health clinics, staffed by those with analytic training, would provide treatment to the poor and the working class for free. When this happened, clinicians would have to \u201calloy the pure gold of analysis freely with the copper of direct suggestion.\u201d (During the interwar period, free clinics sprang up in ten cities, including London, Vienna, and Berlin. According to the scholar Elizabeth Danto, the first and second generation of psychoanalysts devoted at least one fifth of their clinical work to the urban&nbsp;poor.)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Still, many resisted change. Over time, as psychoanalysis became established, different tendencies hardened into factions\u2014particularly in the United States, where, according to Hale, the most conservative analysts became \u201cmore Freudian than Freud.\u201d When these analysts were in power, as they were for much of the twentieth century, heterodox analysts\u2014including Karen Horney, who challenged Freud\u2019s views on gender and founded what became known as \u201cfeminine psychology\u201d\u2014were frequently marginalized.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the end, history took a cruel turn. The Nazi Party came to power in the Thirties, threatening psychoanalysts\u2014many of them Jews, Communists, or both\u2014with annihilation. Freud died on September 23, 1939, twenty-two days after World War&nbsp;II began, and didn\u2019t live to see the war\u2019s devastating effect on the psychoanalytic community. Many European analysts were imprisoned and killed. Others fled to the United States; the influx of \u00e9migr\u00e9 analysts was one among several reasons that psychoanalysis took off in America after 1945. But anticommunist sentiment had forced some analysts to suppress their leftist politics. Gonz\u00e1lez described this moment of collective repression to me as one of several traumatic moments in the history of the discipline that must be worked through. \u201cWhat\u2019s needed now is the psychoanalysis of psychoanalysis.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cPsychoanalysis can go burn!\u201d said Sameer Khan. \u201cWe\u2019re here to serve patients.\u201d The future of the profession writ large was not Khan\u2019s&nbsp;concern.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Khan, a psychiatrist in New York, is a friendly man in his forties with long, dark hair and an easy smile. We met in between sessions on the penultimate day of the conference. By that point, change was in the air. In panels and plenary addresses, speakers encouraged the audience to try out new clinical approaches, and to resist change at their own risk. During one event, Kerry Sulkowicz, APsA\u2019s president, a slick figure who works in leadership and organizational consulting, took the stage to announce that a ballot measure loosening APsA\u2019s membership requirements had passed with 81 percent of the vote. Before, it had been the case that only M.D.s, Ph.D.s, and social workers who had completed psychoanalytic training at an APsA institute could become full members of the association\u2014but now others (therapists, academics, and researchers) who were trained in psychotherapy at APsA or equivalent institutes could join the association with full membership. The change \u201chelps ensure our future,\u201d he said, to raucous applause.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Khan was skeptical of all this celebration. \u201cIs change nice?\u201d he asked, rhetorically. Psychoanalysts, he told me, tend to romanticize change, fear, and uncertainty, as if they were always productive. He seemed to doubt the social turn\u2014not because he objected to training more analysts of color, or to adjusting treatment plans to better reflect the patient population, but because he didn\u2019t think it would change the profession very much. (Another skeptic declined to speak with me on the record, fearing being branded as conservative or racist. Some others I contacted refused to speak altogether.) For all this talk of the social, there wasn\u2019t as much talk about how to make psychoanalysis more affordable to patients. APsA represented people who often earned six figures a year. \u201cIt\u2019s like, yes, we want to do good, but also, how much do these pants cost?\u201d he asked, gesturing to the pair he was wearing. (They cost three hundred dollars.)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cYou\u2019re supposed to get people to talk about things so that everything can be metabolized,\u201d Khan said. But during many discussions, analysts of color were careful and controlled, as they had been in the discussion group on social and historical factors. They were inhibited. Such self-censorship was pragmatic: those in power would resist change if they felt themselves threatened. What we had witnessed at the meeting might be reform rather than revolution\u2014or, worse, simply a self-congratulatory discussion of things that might never come to&nbsp;pass.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Not long after the New York meeting, the American psychoanalytic community&nbsp;erupted.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>During planning for the June meeting, several committee members proposed inviting Lara Sheehi\u2014an assistant professor of clinical psychology at George Washington University known for her work on Palestine\u2014to participate in a panel. Sheehi was being investigated by her own university (and would later be investigated by the U.S.&nbsp;Department of Education) after StandWithUs, a pro-Israel advocacy group, filed a complaint with the department\u2019s Office for Civil Rights alleging that there had been anti-Semitic discrimination in her classroom. APsA\u2019s executive committee, headed by Sulkowicz and president-elect Dan Prezant, forbade extending the invitation, claiming that organizers wouldn\u2019t be able to \u201ccontain\u201d reactions to an event with Sheehi. In response, the program committee ultimately refused to plan a June program entirely. The executive committee then disbanded the program committee. APsA\u2019s email list promptly went&nbsp;nuts.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Discussion on the email list was vicious, with some posters supporting the executive committee\u2019s decision and others supporting the program committee. People leveled accusations of racism, misogyny, and anti-Semitism at one another. APsA members on both sides claimed to feel \u201cunsafe.\u201d One member characterized those angry at the executive committee as \u201cbirds of prey\u201d who were \u201cwilling to rip [APsA] apart.\u201d Another member told me that it felt like everyone had to pick a&nbsp;side.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The weeks that followed were chaotic: it seemed the June meeting wouldn\u2019t happen, then it was back on. (It did, in the end, take place as planned.) The program committee was gone for good\u2014then, suddenly, reinstated. In a stunning reversal, the executive committee offered an apology to Sheehi, who had recently been cleared of wrongdoing by George Washington University, and, in late March, invited her to present at the June meeting after all. (She declined, and has since been cleared by the Department of Education\u2019s investigation.) Less than two weeks after that, Sulkowicz, although a self-described proponent of the social turn, sent a letter to membership resigning from his position as president of APsA and pointing fingers at an \u201cilliberal, extreme left\u201d that had \u201casserted its exclusive occupancy of the moral high ground\u201d and that aimed \u201cto transform APsA from a professional organization into a primarily political activist organization.\u201d He worried for the future of psychoanalysis: \u201cOur tendency to turn against ourselves represents a social defense against psychoanalytic progress vis a vis the outside world, and may be our greatest&nbsp;risk.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On Juneteenth 2023, just days after the contested June meeting took place, the Holmes Commission released its report. Across 421&nbsp;pages, the report offered a comprehensive account of the commission\u2019s qualitative research methods\u2014which involved surveying institute faculty, staff, administrators, and candidates, and following up a sample of these surveys with in-depth interviews\u2014as well as its findings. The commission found that many participants felt unequipped to address racism, that word-of-mouth recruitment methods led to majority-white training institutes, and that \u201cracial enactments\u201d\u2014the manifestation of racist attitudes and behaviors\u2014were common. The report recommended that training institutes focus on the recruitment and retention of candidates of color; that the curriculum at psychoanalytic training institutes be diversified; and that there be a \u201c<em>top-down prioritization<\/em>&nbsp;of issues of race and racism within psychoanalytic settings.\u201d Many of the training institutes affiliated with APsA, including those in Boston and Minneapolis, committed to organizing group readings of the report. It was understood that, as in analysis itself, meaningful change would take many&nbsp;years.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Meanwhile, people were leaving. Some APsA members, including members of color and Sheehi herself, resigned from the organization, citing controversy around the program committee and Sheehi\u2019s invitation as the reason. Others who had planned to join\u2014like Khan\u2014decided not to. Mitchell Wilson, an analyst in California and the former editor in chief of APsA\u2019s publication, the&nbsp;<em>Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association,<\/em>&nbsp;lamented the development. \u201cHaving a younger set of folks who are theoretically sophisticated, politically active, and committed is incredibly important. And those people overall have left,\u201d he told me. \u201cThat\u2019s a huge loss for some of us. I think, for others, it\u2019s a&nbsp;relief.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As 2024 began, analysts gathered once again in New York. With some of the more progressive members of APsA absent, the gathering felt more relaxed, though also less energetic. Some months after the meeting, Moss was replaced as leader of the program committee, and the committee was reduced in&nbsp;size.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cVery deflating for many of us,\u201d Moss wrote to me in an&nbsp;email.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Holmes Commission concluded its formal work in February 2024. At that year\u2019s New York meeting, the commission held a panel for what it called \u201ccollective processing\u201d of the report. In an email, Gonz\u00e1lez\u2014who, like several people I spoke to, did not attend the 2024 meeting\u2014said a number of commission members were then working to establish the Consultation Liaison Network, which he described as a \u201cnetwork of individuals working psychoanalytically with a shared interest in race work, diversity, and, generally, a more inclusive and progressive psychoanalysis\u201d that could coordinate with training institutes on issues of race and that would be entirely independent of&nbsp;APsA.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cI think there\u2019s going to be a lot of splintering,\u201d said Khan, when we reconnected in the spring of 2024. Cheerful and loquacious during our previous encounter, he now seemed more despondent, muted. The past year had been \u201csucky\u201d: he\u2019d fallen out with his own analyst over the war in Gaza, stopped treatment, distanced himself from APsA, and like other clinicians of color, felt \u201ca general jadedness\u201d about institutional psychoanalysis. He\u2019d attended only one event at the 2024 New York meeting, the Holmes Commission\u2019s panel. \u201cYou make your environment inhospitable, and then minorities leave,\u201d he explained. \u201cAPsA was like a beacon. You could go there, you could hear people, and you could get inspired. You could be like, Oh, maybe I want to be an analyst.\u201d Now younger and more progressive analysts would have to seek out the splinter groups, which are smaller and less well known. He wasn\u2019t sure they would find&nbsp;them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Like many institutions in the early 2020s, APsA felt compelled to change: to diversify its membership, to address racism, to speak to the political moment. But it seemed to Khan that the moment for change had passed. The social turn had its problems\u2014and many, if not all, of its critics raised their questions in good faith\u2014but it had drawn an influx of clinicians and researchers to a profession in desperate need of new blood. Without them, the American psychoanalytic community might well remain a homogeneous group of aging professionals talking among themselves. \u201cI think it\u2019s going to be more of the same, but in a more aggressive way,\u201d Khan told me. \u201cBecause you have to do a lot more aggressive things to stay the&nbsp;same.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/harpers.org\/author\/maggiedoherty\/\">Maggie Doherty<\/a><\/strong> is the author of\u00a0<em>The Equivalents: A Story of Art, Female Friendship, and Liberation in the 1960s<\/em>, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in Biography.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Psychoanalysis at an inflection point by\u00a0Maggie Doherty, April 2025 Issue On the morning of February 2, 2023, I exited the subway at 57th Street to find the air growing colder. It had been a warm winter. But the first proper cold front was moving in, and I already felt underdressed. I propelled myself toward the [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1001004,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[53],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/16239"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1001004"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=16239"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/16239\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":16240,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/16239\/revisions\/16240"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=16239"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=16239"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=16239"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}