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The Rapaport-Holt Correspondence - by David Rapaport & Robert R Holt (Paperback)
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Highlights
- For the Introductin by Robert Holt: Late in July 2011, I had an unexpected call from Arnold D. Richards, an old acquaintance.
- Author(s): David Rapaport & Robert R Holt
- 586 Pages
- Psychology, Movements
Description
Book Synopsis
For the Introductin by Robert Holt:
Late in July 2011, I had an unexpected call from Arnold D. Richards, an old acquaintance. He asked if I happened to have any unpublished papers on psychoanalysis; if so, he offered to make them available to their most likely audience through International Psychoanalysis. It happened that, for about a year, I had been trying to find a publisher for a collection of letters between David Rapaport and me during his final 12 years (1948-1960). When I mentioned that to Dr. Richards, he at once expressed interest, and at last here we are.
How vividly these letters helped me relive twelve years of some of the most intellectually stimulating experiences of my life! I felt the obligation to share them with any interested colleagues, especially because Rapaport had been in the most productive years of his psychoanalytic scholarship. Many of our exchanges give an insight into his way of working, of thinking through difficult issues by discussion. Those who knew him well were aware of the many drafts his papers would go through, but few of us were privy to his ways of working ideas out, making them at once more subtle and clearer.
The letters also display Rapaport as a critic, a mentor and teacher, as he sent me his critiques of my various attempts, often to follow in his footsteps and at times to branch out on my own. He set the example of close reading, responding empathically as well as unsparingly in pointing out difficulties, lapses in reasoning, omissions of relevant data or of treatments of apposite points in the literature. Though he never succeeded in writing English like one born to it, he was a fine critic of grammatical and rhetorical lapses--as the reader will soon see. I did my best not only to meet his criticism but to learn from it his style and technique of editing and advising, and to apply that learning to the drafts that he sent me.
Review Quotes
The correspondence between Robert Holt and David Rapaport is, indeed, a treasure trove. It reveals the thinking of two theoretical giants of psychoanalysis, each one providing intellectual stimulation to the other. This correspondence will be of great value to anyone interested in psychoanalytic history and theory. But further, it is not only a reminder of the halcyon days of psychoanalytic influence and theorizing, but can serve as a model of clarity of thought and lucidity of writing - qualities that could contribute much to contemporary psychoanalysis.
-- Morris Eagle, PhD, professor emeritus, Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, Adelphi University, former president of the division of psychoanalysis, American Psychological Association.
"David Rapaport felt an enormous debt to the past and an enormous responsibility to the future. He belabored mightily to pay the debt and to fulfill the responsibility by performing his task in the chain of generations. Though not a religious man, he was deeply attached to Jewish culture. Zichrono l'vrocho: His memory will be blessed."
(Gill, M.M, 1967, pg. 7).