Georgia on Our Mind
Witnessing, Recognition, and Psychic Reconciliation in the Therapeutic Encounter
May 14-15, 2022
At this moment in our nation’s reckoning with systemic racism, Black psychoanalysts are uniquely positioned to address the unconscious transmissions of racism over the centuries and how it shows up today, both in social and clinical contexts, often disavowed but malignant and deadly. For this fourth conference by Black Psychoanalysts Speak, the first time it has met outside New York City, the conference will provide space to explore how psychoanalysis can not only identify, but also attend to, the deep psychic scars that the legacies of racism have left on the country. As the organization’s leadership puts it, “At its core, psychoanalysis is a radical revisioning of culture and all forms of human relatedness. It asks us to examine the processes of self-deception that perpetuate both individual unhappiness and the social structures that benefit from inequality and oppression.”
Format: This two-day interdisciplinary clinical conference will begin with a keynote address, and will feature live lab Balint Method case consultations, small group discussion opportunities, discussion groups led by nationally recognized Black psychoanalysts and scholars. Can we have dialogic engagement on the issues of racial reckoning through the power of the therapeutic encounter?
Registration Information will be posted after March 5, 2022, on the Black Psychoanalysts Speak website.
Keynote address by Beverly J. Stoute, MD.
Black Psychoanalysts Speak Faculty Members
- Janice O. Bennett, PhD
- Maxine Dennis, MSc, TQSP, UK
- Chanda Griffin, LCSW
- Anton Hart, PhD
- Dorothy E. Holmes, PhD
- Annie Lee Jones, PhD
- Paula Christian-Kliger, PhD
- Kimberlyn R. Leary, PhD
- Dolores Morris, PhD
- Michael Moskowitz, PhD
- Craig Polite, PhD
- Dionne R. Powell, MD
- Richard Reichbart, PhD
- Beverly J. Stoute, MD
- Kirkland Vaughans, PhD
- Cleonie White, PhD
- Kathleen Pogue White, PhD
- Alexandra Woods, PhD
- Samuel P. Wyche, DO
Sponsors
Atlanta Psychoanalytic Society; Black Psychoanalysts Speak; Emory University Psychoanalytic Institute; Emory University Psychoanalytic Studies Program; Atlanta Foundation for Psychoanalysis; Hightower Fund and Laney Graduate School of Emory University; Emory Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Diversity, Inclusion, and Social Justice Committee (DISC)