Christopher Bollas
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Christopher Bollas (born 1943) is a British psychoanalyst and writer. He is a leading figure in contemporary psychoanalytic theory.


Early life and education

Bollas was born in the United States in
Washington, DC ) , image_skyline = , image_caption = Clockwise from top left: the Washington Monument and Lincoln Memorial on the National Mall, United States Capitol, Logan Circle, Jefferson Memorial, White House, Adams Morgan ...
. He grew up in
Laguna Beach, California Laguna Beach (; ''Laguna'', Spanish for "Lagoon") is a seaside resort city located in southern Orange County, California, in the United States. It is known for its mild year-round climate, scenic coves, environmental preservation efforts, and a ...
, and later graduated in history from
UC Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley, Berkeley, Cal, or California) is a public land-grant research university in Berkeley, California. Established in 1868 as the University of California, it is the state's first land-grant uni ...
in 1967. As an undergraduate Bollas studied intellectual history with
Carl Schorske Carl Emil Schorske (March 15, 1915 – September 13, 2015), known professionally as Carl E. Schorske, was an American cultural historian and professor emeritus at Princeton University. In 1981 he won the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction for ...
, and psychoanalytical anthropology with Alan Dundes. From 1967 to 1969 he trained in child counselling at the East Bay Activity Center in
Oakland, California Oakland is the largest city and the county seat of Alameda County, California, United States. A major West Coast of the United States, West Coast port, Oakland is the largest city in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area, the third ...
and from 1969 to 1973 he was the first graduate of the Program in Adult Psychotherapy at the University of Buffalo. At the
University of Buffalo The State University of New York at Buffalo, commonly called the University at Buffalo (UB) and sometimes called SUNY Buffalo, is a public research university with campuses in Buffalo and Amherst, New York. The university was founded in 18 ...
he earned a PhD in English Literature and studied with Norman Holland,
Leslie Fiedler Leslie Aaron Fiedler (March 8, 1917 – January 29, 2003) was an American literary critic, known for his interest in mythography and his championing of genre fiction. His work incorporates the application of psychological theories to American lit ...
, Murray Schwartz, Michel Foucault,
René Girard René Noël Théophile Girard (; ; 25 December 1923 – 4 November 2015) was a French polymath, historian, literary critic, and philosopher of social science whose work belongs to the tradition of philosophical anthropology. Girard was the aut ...
and with the Heideggerian psychoanalyst Heinz Lichtenstein. While at Smith College, to earn an MSW, he visited the Austen Riggs Center (where he was to become Director of Education a decade later) and met Erik Erikson who became a mentor early on in his career and was to be of singular influence for the next twenty years. He qualified in psychoanalysis at the Institute of Psychoanalysis in London in 1977 and in Adult Psychotherapy from the Tavistock Clinic in 1978. Those teachers and figures whom he knew and who helped diversify his thinking were
Arnold Modell Arnold Howard Modell (December 7, 1924 – January 4, 2022) was an American clinical professor of social psychiatry at the Harvard Medical School and a supervising and training analyst at the Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute. He rec ...
,
John Bowlby Edward John Mostyn Bowlby, CBE, FBA, FRCP, FRCPsych (; 26 February 1907 – 2 September 1990) was a British psychologist, psychiatrist, and psychoanalyst, notable for his interest in child development and for his pioneering work in attach ...
, Marion Milner, André Green,
Herbert Rosenfeld Herbert Alexander Rosenfeld (2 July 1910 – 29 November 1986) was a German-British psychoanalyst. Rosenfeld made seminal contributions to Kleinian thinking on psychotic and other very ill patients; while his emphasis on the role of the analy ...
,
Janine Chasseguet-Smirgel Janine Chasseguet-Smirgel (1928 – March 5, 2006) (whose surname is alternatively spelled Chasseguet-Smirguel, but generally not in English-language publications) was a leading French psychoanalyst, a training analyst, and past President of the ...
,
Joseph J. Sandler Joseph J. Sandler (10 January 1927 – 6 October 1998) was a British psychoanalyst within the Anna Freud Grouping – now the Contemporary Freudians – of the British Psychoanalytical Society; and is perhaps best known for what has been called h ...
, J.-B. Pontalis, Nina Coltart, and
Paula Heimann Paula Heimann (née Klatzko; 2 February 1899 – 22 October 1982) was a German psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, who established the phenomenon of countertransference as an important tool of psychoanalytic treatment. Life in Germany Born in ...
.


Career

Bollas was a professor of English at the
University of Massachusetts Amherst The University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass Amherst, UMass) is a public research university in Amherst, Massachusetts and the sole public land-grant university in Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Founded in 1863 as an agricultural college, ...
in the middle 1980s. Concordant with his career in literary and cultural studies, Bollas has worked as a psychotherapist since 1967. His early clinical career focused on children with autism and schizophrenica. He was the first Honorary Non Medical Consultant at the London Clinic of Psychoanalysis, visiting professor in psychoanalysis at the Istituto di Neuropsichiatria Infantile of the University of Rome from 1978 to 1998, Director of Education at the
Austen Riggs Center The Austen Riggs Center is a psychiatric treatment facility in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. It was founded by Austen Fox Riggs in 1913 as the Stockbridge Institute for the Study and Treatment of Psychoneuroses before being renamed in honor of Au ...
from 1985 to 1988 and one of the literary editors of the works of
D.W. Winnicott Donald Woods Winnicott (7 April 1896 – 25 January 1971) was an English paediatrician and psychoanalyst who was especially influential in the field of object relations theory and developmental psychology. He was a leading member of the Br ...
. He became a British citizen in 2010.


Contributions

Bollas is most widely known for his psychoanalytical writings and some of his ideas have had a wide dissemination; indeed, he is one of the most widely read authors in the field of psychoanalysis. His theory of " the unthought known"—that as infants we are informed by many ideas conveyed through action rather than thinking that become part of our unconscious—has been of particular significance, although other concepts "the transformational object", "violent innocence", "extractive introjection", "psychic genera and the receptive unconscious" and "human idiom" have been widely influential in the clinical field.


Free association

In the middle 1990s in ''Being A Character'' (1992) and ''Cracking Up'' (1995) Bollas turned back to Freud's early writing—especially ''The Interpretation of Dreams''—and argued that Freud's writing implicitly assumed a theory of unconscious perception, organisation, and creativity that Bollas integrated and used in his own radical return to Freud, arguing that psychoanalysis is primarily efficacious due to entirely unconscious processes of change. In the 21st century, in ''Free Association'', ''The Evocative Object World'' and ''The Infinite Question'', Bollas revived Freud's marginalised theory of free association providing evidence of how and in what ways all people think associatively, revealing—as Freud argued—through the "chain of ideas", or simply how the way people move from one topic to another reveals unconscious processes of thought. In 2010 the journalist Or Ezrati, writing in the Israeli newspaper '' Haaretz'', remarked: "Some people see Christopher Bollas as one of the two most important living theoreticians in the world of psychoanalysis".


Idiom needs

In ''Being a Character'', Bollas also argued that everybody had their own idiom for life—a blend between the psychic organisation which from birth forms the self's core, and the implied logic of the familial way of relating into which we are then raised. As adults, Bollas considered we spend our time looking for objects of interest—human or material—which can serve to enhance our particular idioms or styles of life—perpetually "meeting idiom needs by securing evocatively nourishing objects". Being willing to risk exposure to such transformational objects was for Bollas an essential part of a healthy life: the readiness to be metamorphosed by one's interaction with the object world. The contrast was a refusal of development and self-invention, of open-endedness: the state of psychic stagnation. Bollas saw in what he called the anti-narcissist a willed refusal to use objects for the development of his/her own idiom, and a consequent foreclosure of the true self. The result can lead to what Adam Phillips called "the core catastrophe in many of Bollas's powerful clinical vignettes... being trapped in someone else's (usually the parents') dream or view of the world". Bollas was however well aware of the converse danger of expecting too much from the role of the transformational object, especially as found within the
transference Transference (german: Übertragung) is a phenomenon within psychotherapy in which the "feelings, attitudes, or desires" a person had about one thing are subconsciously projected onto the here-and-now Other. It usually concerns feelings from a ...
.


In popular culture

Aside from his clinical writings, Bollas is also a cultural critic and his writings have earned the interests of people outside the world of psychoanalysis.Hunt, Ian, ''The Unthought Known'', Frieze Magazine, Issue 68. He has also written three comic novels: ''Dark at the End of the Tunnel'', ''I Have Heard the Mermaids Singing'' and ''Mayhem'' - and five plays. An American television sitcom, '' Cracking Up'', derived its title from Bollas' book of that title and included a main character, "Dr Bollas", played by
Henry Gibson Henry Gibson (born James Bateman; September 21, 1935 – September 14, 2009) was an American actor and poet. His best-known roles include his time as a cast member of the TV sketch-comedy series ''Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In'' from 1968 to 19 ...
. Bollas is also among the psychoanalysts mentioned in the first series of HBO's ''
In Treatment ''In Treatment'' is an American drama television series for HBO, produced and developed by Rodrigo Garcia, based on the Israeli series '' BeTipul'' ( he, בטיפול), created by Hagai Levi, Ori Sivan and Nir Bergman. The series is about a ...
''.


Bibliography


Nonfiction

* ''The Shadow of the Object'' (1987,
Free Association Books Free Association Books is a project started in London in the 1980s. Bob Young and colleagues began a search using psychoanalysis to understand the problems of liberation. Other people became involved in the movement such as Andrew Samuels and B ...
: 1987 Columbia University Press) * ''Forces of Destiny'' (1989, Free Association Books) * ''Being a Character'' (1992, Routledge) * ''Cracking Up'' (1995, Routledge) * ''The New Informants'' (with David Sundelson, 1996, Jason Aronson) * ''The Mystery of Things'' (1999, Routledge) * ''Hysteria'' (1999, Routledge) * ''Free Association'' (2002, Ikon Books) * ''The Freudian Moment'' (2007, Karnac Books) * ''The Evocative Object World'' (2009, Routledge) * ''The Infinite Question'' (2009, Routledge) * ''The Christopher Bollas Reader'' (2011, Routledge) * ''China on the Mind'' (2013, Routledge) * ''Catch Them Before They Fall: Psychoanalysis of Breakdown'' (2013, Routledge) * ''When the Sun Bursts: The Enigma of Schizophrenia'' (2015, Yale University Press) * ''Meaning and Melancholia'' (2018, Routledge) *''Three Characters: Narcissist, Borderline, Manic Depressive'' (2021, Phoenix Publishing House) ISBN 978-1912691814


Fiction and plays

* ''Dark at the End of the Tunnel'' (2004 Free Association Books) * ''I Have Heard the Mermaids Singing'' (2005 Free Association Books) * ''Theraplay and Other Plays'' (2005 Free Association Books) * ''Mayhem'' (2005, Free Associations Books)


Works about Bollas

* ''The Vitality of Objects'' ed. Joseph Scalia (2002, Continuum) * ''The Independent Mind in British Psychoanalysis'' Eric Rayner, (1991, Aronson) * ''The Metapsychology of Christopher Bollas: an Introduction,'' Sarah Nettleton (2016, Routledge)


References


External links


Christopher Bollas Website
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bollas, Christopher 1943 births American psychoanalysts Analysands of Masud Khan Autism researchers British psychoanalysts Living people People from Laguna Beach, California Smith College School for Social Work alumni UC Berkeley College of Letters and Science alumni University of Massachusetts Amherst faculty University at Buffalo alumni Austen Riggs Center physicians