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This volume presents a series of original theories formulated over Dr. Henry Kellerman's more than 50 year career first as psychologist, then as psychoanalyst. These are theories reflecting phenomena both in the natural as well as social sciences. They are foundational theories, several of which were published in scientific and clinical journals, as well as in books. The seven theories formulated and presented here are: 1) The entire nightmare domain as it relates to dreaming and to the various facets of emotion and personality; a formulation able to account for all possible nightmare contents with respect to only a few named basic nightmare categories. 2) The transformation of the apparent ...
Probes institutional life through 9 fascinating profiles. Readers will not soon forget these stories or how Dr. Henry Kellerman deals with the delusional, the unusual and strange, in a contemporary setting.
Using archival research and recorded interviews, this book charts the development of American Studies in Europe during the early Cold War. It demonstrates how negotiations took place through a network of relationships and draws lessons for public diplomacy in an age when communities are connected through multi-hub, multi-directional networks.
Significant developments within the past few years have made possible the publication of this rather large volume focusing on specific emotions of human experience, such as interest, joy, anger, distress, fear, shame, shyness, and guilt. The relevant events include new evidence on the relationship of emotions to cognitive processes and to personality traits and defense mechanisms. They also include discoveries relating to the biological foundations of emotions and theory regarding their significance in human evolution. Finally, there have been important findings on the role of emotions and emotion expressions in social relations, pain, grief, and psychopathology. These developments are elabo...
First multi-year cumulation covers six years: 1965-70.
After a decades-long career spent analyzing others, the renowned psychoanalyst Henry Kellerman turns his gaze inward. To Bring Good News weaves together anecdotes from Kellerman's life and reflections on a century of history to tell how a child actor and performer of Yiddish poetry from the Bronx, growing up in the shadow of the Holocaust, rose to become a successful therapist and the author and editor of over forty books. Kellerman sweeps us from the Ukraine of his parents' youth to his New York City childhood in the 1940s and '50s; to his own appearances onstage at Carnegie Hall and Madison Square Garden; to the dance halls of the South Bronx and Miami, the sites of his youthful escapades and romantic affairs; and through the academic and career successes of his professional life. His deep well of love for his family is a clear source of strength and a driving force in all that he would accomplish. Running throughout are the themes that have shaped his life: the search for a home, for a career that would allow him to feel anonymous, and for a way to make a contribution to his community and to his family-to bring them good news.