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DTSTART:20230101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240602T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240602T170000
DTSTAMP:20240423T152910Z
CREATED:20240423T152842Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240423T152910Z
UID:7945-1717340400-1717347600@acapnj.org
SUMMARY:NJI & ACAP Event | Spring Workshop: What Words Can't Say
DESCRIPTION:Howard B. Levine M.D. \nSunday\, June 2nd 2024\, 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm\, via Zoom \nThe last day to register for this event is May 28th\, 2024. \n\n  \nHoward B. Levine\, is a member of APSA\, PINE\, the Contemporary Freudian Society and Pulsion\, on the faculty of NYU Post-Doc’s Contemporary Freudian Track\, on the Editorial Board of the IJP and Psychoanalytic Inquiry\, editor-in-chief of the Routledge Wilfred Bion Studies Book Series and in private practice in Brookline\, Massachusetts. He is the author of Transformations de l’Irreprésentable (Ithaque 2019) and Affect\, Representation and Language: Between the Silence and the Cry (Routledge 2022) and editor of The Post Bionian Field Theory of Antonino Ferro (Routledge 2022)\, The Freudian Matrix of Andre Green: Towards a Psychoanalysis for the 21st Century by André Green (Routledge/IPA 2023) and Andre Green’s On The Destruction and Death Drives (Phoenix/Karnac 2023). His co-edited books include Unrepresented States and the Construction of Meaning (Karnac 2013); On Freud’s Screen Memories (Karnac 2014); The Wilfred Bion Tradition (Karnac 2016); Bion in Brazil (Karnac 2017); The Clinical Thinking of W.R. Bion in Brazil (Routledge 2024); André Green Revisited: Representation and the Work of the Negative (Karnac 2018); Psychoanalysis and Covidian Life (Phoenix 2021); Psychoanalysis of the Psychoanalytic Frame Revisited: A New Look at Bleger’s Classical Work (Routledge/IPA 2022); On the Destruction and Death Drives by André Green (Phoenix 2023); and Autistic Phenomena and Unrepresented States: Explorations in the Emergence of Self (Phoenix 2023). ______________________________________________________________________________________ \n Psychoanalysis is the “talking cure\,” but the problems raised by language are complex\, paradoxical and perhaps unsolvable. At their most effective\, words play a vital role in psychic homeostatic regulation and the psychoanalytic process that is analogous to the architecturally structural role played by the keystone of an arch. The problem\, however\, is that words can be used to reveal or conceal\, to convey meaning or obscure\, distort\, hide\, fragment or evacuate meaning. And sometimes the very nature of language falls short of being able to capture and adequately communicate the psychic dimensions of our emotional lives. This presentation will explore the limitations of words and language in psychoanalysis from the perspective of the work of Freud\, Bion and Green \n. __________________________________________________________________  \n2 Continuing Education Credits/Hours Level: All levels The last day to register for this event is May 28\, 2024.  \nFor registration: https://www.njinstitute.com/spring-workshop-what-words-cant-say/  \nFor more information please call 201-836-1065\, or visit us online at www.njinstitute.com
URL:https://acapnj.org/event/nji-acap-event-spring-workshop-what-words-cant-say/
LOCATION:zoom
CATEGORIES:Event
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240619T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240619T130000
DTSTAMP:20240531T211911Z
CREATED:20240531T211641Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240531T211911Z
UID:8003-1718798400-1718802000@acapnj.org
SUMMARY:Brown Bag Lunch: Juneteenth:  ﻿Trauma Perspective in Clinical Practice
DESCRIPTION:with \nDr. Demetria DeLia & Rev. Dr.Glenmore Bembry\, Jr. \nBrown Bag Lunch Series\nJune 19th 2024 12:00 – 1:00 pm \nOn Zoom – 1 CE \n\n\nThe trauma of slavery has intergenerational effects that can unfold clinically through transference. This requires the therapist to be self-aware of the impact of societal values that may surface in countertransference enactments. Clients who have suffered through societal racism may bring personal unconscious family dynamics into the therapeutic relationship\, as well as issues of trust in a dyad where white therapists treat diverse clients. \n  \nOn June 19th\, 1865\, US General Gordon Granger took control in Galveston\, Texas\, informing enslaved people that they were free\, and the Civil War was officially ended. Thus\, Juneteenth was important to formerly enslaved people in this country as the date of their liberation. In Texas\, formerly enslaved people and their descendants celebrated the event annually\, keeping alive the importance of the 1865 date. Texas became the first state to name Juneteenth a state holiday. Still\, it was not until 2018 that the Texas Board of Education finally voted to document in school curricula that slavery was the leading cause of the Civil War. \n  \nOn June 17th\, 2021\, President Biden signed a bill making Juneteenth a national holiday\, recognizing that the history of slavery is a shameful blight America should admit rather than ignore. That prolonged 156-year resistance to acknowledgment highlights how the trauma of slavery can still be an open wound for many in its aftermath. We must be mindful of this cultural legacy\, especially among those seeking therapy who bring with them the historical enslavement of their ancestors. \n  \nCourse Objectives – Participants will learn to: \n\nTo sensitize clinicians to the racism integral to the founding doctrines of the United States\nTo understand how clients in psychotherapy may continue to be affected by the trauma of slavery\nTo identify transference and countertransference dynamics that unfold as a result of bias\nTo discuss the historical significance of Juneteenth and the importance of recognizing the psychic scars of slavery that clients may carry into current therapeutic relationships\n\n\nDr. Demetria DeLia\, PhD. \nDr. DeLia is a faculty member\, training analyst\, supervisor and Dean of Research at ACAP/ICPS. Dr. DeLia holds a MSW degree and a MA in Education and is a member of the Diversity and Inclusion Team. \n\nRev. Dr. Glenmore Bembry\, Jr. \nRev. Dr. Glenmore Bembry\, Jr.\, a native of Hawkinsville\, Georgia\, holds degrees from Montclair State University (BS)\, Colgate Rochester Divinity School (MDiv)\, and New York Theological Seminary (DMin). With 40 years as an American Baptist Senior Pastor\, he founded Life Quakes Coaching Consulting Ministries\, focusing on integrating faith and mental health. Currently\, he is pursuing certification as a mental health coach at ACAP. Dr. Bembry is Interim Pastor of the historic First Baptist Peddie Memorial Church in Newark\, NJ\, and has served as an Adjunct Professor of Theology and Philosophy at Bloomfield College for 32 years. \n\nFor questions or information email Cassio Campello at \nevents@acapnj.org or call 973-629-1002 \nACAP is an approved CE provider for: \nArt Therapists — Counselors \nMarriage and Family Counselors \nNJ Psychoanalysts — NJ Social Workers \nNY Creative Arts Therapists \nPsychologists \n For full CE Information- visit our website: https://acapnj.org/ce-information/
URL:https://acapnj.org/event/brown-bag-lunch-juneteenth-trauma-perspective-in-clinical-practice/
LOCATION:zoom
CATEGORIES:Event
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