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Société Française de Psychanalyse

33 bytes added, 10:55, 1 June 2019
Foundation
The '''Société Française de [[Psychanalyse]]''' ('''SFP''') was a [[French]] [[psychoanalytic]] professional [[body]] formed in 1953, in a [[split]] from the main body of French [[psychoanalysts]], the [[Paris Psychoanalytic Society|''Société Parisienne de Psychanalyse'']] (SPP).
The SFP was eventually dissolved in 1965, its resources and membership [[being]] split between the two new bodies, the [[Association Psychanalytique de France]] (APF),<ref>David Macey, Introduction, Jacques [[Lacan]], ''The Four Fundamental [[Concepts]] of [[Psycho]]-[[Analysis]]'' (1994[1964[) p. xxxv</ref> and the [[École Freudienne de Paris]] (EFP), founded by [[Jacques Lacan]].<ref>E. Roudinesco, ''[[Jacques lacan|Jacques Lacan]]'' (1999) p. 293-4</ref>
==Foundation==
The early 1950s were a [[time]] of growing disagreements within the SPP, mainly centred on the question of the [[training]] of [[analysts]].<ref>Roudinesco, p. 201</ref> Despite wishing himself to avoid a split, Lacan was drawn into the dissident movement led by [[Daniel Lagache]], as a result of his own [[separate]] dispute with the president [[Sacha Nacht]] over his [[practice]] of "[[short sessions]]".<ref>[http://www.spp.asso.fr/Main/HistoirePsy/Histoire/Items/8.htm SPP history of the discussions on psychoanalytic technique (French language)] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070309200737/http://www.spp.asso.fr/main/HistoirePsy/Histoire/Items/8.htm |date=2007-03-09 }}</ref>
After a year of disagreements and a vote of no confidence, five members of the SPP resigned from the body in June 1953.<ref>[http://www.spp.asso.fr/Main/HistoirePsy/Histoire/Items/9.htm SPP history of the schism (French language)] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070308054958/http://www.spp.asso.fr/main/HistoirePsy/Histoire/Items/9.htm |date=2007-03-08 }}</ref> These five were Lacan, Lagache, [[wp:Françoise Dolto|Dolto]], Favez-Boutonnier and Reverchon-Jouve.
Unfortunately an unexpected by-product of the split was to deprive the new group, who termed themselves the Société Française de Psychanalyse (SFP), of membership of the [[International Psychoanalytical Association]] (IPA), to which they now had to seek out affiliation.<ref>{{cite journal |last1= Hartmann |first1= Heintz |date=Jan 1953|title=XVIIIth Congress of the International Psychoanalytical Association, Report from the President |journal=[[October (journal)|October]] |volume=40 |author2= Sauer, R; Birkenhake, S; Kühn, R; Wittekind, C; Schrott, Km; Martus, P |issue= 1 |pages= 121–7 |issn= 0360-3016 |pmid= 9422567}}, p72</ref>
==Outcome==
[[w:Wikipediawp:Elisabeth Roudinesco|Elisabeth Roudinesco]] concluded that “the 1963-4 break was as disastrous for the IPA as it was for the [[development]] of Lacanianism”.<ref>Roudinesco, p. 259</ref>
==See also==
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