Clara Thompson

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Clara Mabel Thompson
Born(1893-10-03)October 3, 1893
Providence, Rhode Island
DiedDecember 20, 1958(1958-12-20) (aged 65)
New York City
NationalityAmerican
Alma materPembroke College at Brown University (B.A.)
Johns Hopkins University (M.D.)
OccupationPsychiatrist & Psychoanalyst
Notable workPsychoanalysis: Evolution and Development (1950)

Clara Mabel Thompson, M.D. (October 3, 1893 in Providence, Rhode Island – December 20, 1958 in New York City) was a prominent psychiatrist and psychoanalyst and co-founder of the William Alanson White Institute. She published articles and books about psychoanalysis as a whole and specifically about the psychology of women.

Education

Thompson graduated from the Women's College (Pembroke College) at Brown University. In 1916, she went on to earn her Doctor of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University, initially interested in becoming a medical missionary before pursuing a career in psychoanalysis. She interned at the New York Infirmary for Women and Children, and she completed her residency in psychiatry at The Henry Phipps Psychiatric Clinic at the Johns Hopkins Hospital in 1925.[1]

Career

Thompson established a private practice and taught at Vassar College and the New York Psychoanalytic Institute. She studied with Sándor Ferenczi, a pupil and colleague of Freud, in Budapest. She co-founded the American Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis and was elected its first vice president.[1] She published over 50 papers, articles, and reviews over the course of her career, as well as three books, including Psychoanalysis: Evolution and Development (1950).

In 1943, Thompson founded the William Alanson White Psychiatric Foundation in New York together with Erich Fromm, Harry Stack Sullivan, Frieda Fromm-Reichmann, David Rioch and Janet Rioch. She served as its executive director for many years and worked there until her death in 1958.[2]

Contribution to psychoanalysis

Thompson's main contribution to the field of psychoanalysis consists of an extensive overview of the field. She wrote books and papers about the origin and development of psychoanalysis, because her students were confused by the varied approaches of different psychoanalytic schools: in her own words because"if one stopped emphasizing differences and tried to note the general stream of development one would find that this infant science (...) has a forward moving direction to which all of the different schools have contributed". Thompson had an extensive knowledge of the field of psychoanalysis regarding both developments [3] and the different positions and schools.[4] In describing the different schools Thompson took a position in the middle of the psychoanalytic spectrum; she always stressed what different views could add to the field and always spoke with great respect about representatives of the different schools.

Thompson divided psychoanalysis' development into four periods:

(1) 1885–1900: In this period the majority of the basic ideas of psychoanalysis were born out of Freud's mind and remain at the center of some schools up till the present day.

(2) 1900–1910/1920: Stressed the importance of the biological sexual development of the child.

(3) 1910–1925: The focus extended itself to the entire personality.

(4) 1925–present: The view on psychoanalysis expanded from internal forces only (the classic psychoanalysis) to the influences of culture and other persons on the patient and its psychoanalysis. This is also the view that Thompson herself embraced: the influence of culture and interpersonal relationship can never be discarded in psychoanalysis.

In theory and practice, she emphasized and analyzed what went on between people to facilitate the growth of a human relationship. She passionately believed in the value of psychoanalysis for enhancing the humanity of persons, no matter how sick they appeared to be.

Her book Psychoanalysis: Evolution and Development (1950) is a comprehensive documentation of the course of psychoanalytic theory and practice.[1] Thompson traces the evolution of psychoanalytic theories to demonstrate that it has changed since its Freudian theorization. Specifically, although she recognizes Freud's genius, she notes his limitations in the theory and focuses on the changes that occurred due to the contribution of great therapists that followed Freud. Thompson also refers to cultural anthropology research as another contributor to further evolution of psychoanalysis. Moreover, in this book, she investigates how the therapist-patient relationship has been viewed in the course of time. She underscores the importance of this relationship in the therapeutic procedure.

In her paper, "The Different Schools of Psychoanalysis" (1957), Thompson notes some of the basic concepts of Freud, Adler, Jung, Rank, Ferenczi, Horney, Sullivan and Fromm. She concludes that, despite the differences between these approaches to the field of ego psychology, all these writers are aiming at "the creation of a science of man built on the foundation Freud has laid."[2]

Psychology of women in a cultural context

Clara Thompson presented an outline of the main facts towards the psychology of women[5] and established this within the context of the assignment of social meanings that are given to biological differences between the two sexes within different cultural contexts. This outline stimulated further exploration along the various paths in this issue. Thompson considered the status of women in relation to men in regard to its fluctuate development in the course of the centuries and in different cultures and societies. In formulating a psychology of women, she stated that one has to consider first, what is basically different about men and women and second, what variations on this basic pattern have been produced by cultural tradition, and thirdly, how these variations seem to promote or inhibit the basic biological strivings.

In her work, she credits Freud with developing theories about the psychology of women, but she took issue with his focus on male psychology. She insists that women's psychology is "something in its own right and not merely a negation of maleness."[1]

Thompson saw gender most fundamentally as a cultural creation: gender characteristics are established by the assignment of social cultural meanings to biological differences. She saw the most problematic phase for girls in adolescence, in the perception of differences in social constraints and power. Thompson suggested that, because of economic disparities and the use of seductiveness as an understandable compensatory commodity, "woman's alleged narcissism and greater need to be loved may be entirely the result of economic necessity". In her paper "Towards a Psychology of Women" Thompson (1953) tries to find some general elements of the psychology of the American woman in her time.[1] She focuses on ways in which society frustrates or distorts basic biological drives of women.

Bibliography

  • Psychoanalysis: Evolution and Development, 1950
  • Interpersonal Psychoanalysis: The Selected Papers of Clara M. Thompson, ed. M.R. Green, 1964
  • On Women, ed. M.R. Green, 1971

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Clara Mabel Thompson". American women writers : a critical reference guide : from colonial times to the present. Benbow-Pfalzgraf, Taryn. (2nd ed.). Detroit: St. James Press. 2000. ISBN 9781558624290. OCLC 42027536.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  2. ^ a b Green, M.R. (1964). Interpersonal psychoanalysis: the selected papers of Clara M. Thompson New York: Basic Books Inc.
  3. ^ Thompson, C. & Mullahy, P. (1951). Psychoanalysis: evolution and development (3rd ed.). New York: Hermitage House
  4. ^ Thompson, C. (Ed.), Mazer, M. & Witenberg, E. (1955). An outline of psychoanalysis. New York: Random House
  5. ^ Thompson, C.M. (1953). Towards a psychology of women. Pastoral Psychology, 4 (34), 29-38

Further reading

  • Mitchell, S. A. & Black, M. (1995). Freud and beyond: A history of modern psychoanalytic thought. New York: Basic Books.
  • Thompson, C. M. (1957). The different schools of psychoanalysis. American Journal of Nursing, 57, 1304–1307