Muriel Drazien | |
---|---|
![]() Muriel Drazien (undated) | |
Born |
New York, USA | September 7, 1938
Died | April 14, 2018
Rome, Italy | (aged 79)
Education | Columbia University |
Occupation(s) | Psychoanalyst, author |
Spouse | Pasquale Chessa |
Muriel Drazien (September 7, 1938 – April 14, 2018) was an American psychoanalyst working first in Paris and then in Rome, a Lacanian and one of the three Tripode [1] that fostered the teaching of Jacques Lacan in Italy.
Born in New York from parents of middle European Ashkenazi descent she was educated at Columbia University. She won a Fulbright scholarship to study medicine in Paris. There she studied psychoanalysis under the direct tuition of Jacques Lacan and went on to work with many French exponents of his discipline, including Françoise Dolto, Maud Mannoni, Moustapha Safouan. She was one of the founders of École Freudienne de Paris. [2]
Consistent with Lacan's 1973 Letter to the Italians, [3] [4] [5] in which she is nominated along with Contri and Verdiglione, she transferred to work in Rome, where she fostered Lacan's teaching.
In 1983, she founded the Psychoanalytic Association Cosa Freudiana [6] to which she also acted as chairperson. [7]
In 2002, in conjunction with the Italian Ministry of Education, Universities and she founded the Laboratorio Freudiano [8] where she acted as both director and teacher.
She is remembered [1] as a valued member of the Association Lacanienne Internationale. [9]
Mostly in French or Italian:
Muriel Drazien | |
---|---|
![]() Muriel Drazien (undated) | |
Born |
New York, USA | September 7, 1938
Died | April 14, 2018
Rome, Italy | (aged 79)
Education | Columbia University |
Occupation(s) | Psychoanalyst, author |
Spouse | Pasquale Chessa |
Muriel Drazien (September 7, 1938 – April 14, 2018) was an American psychoanalyst working first in Paris and then in Rome, a Lacanian and one of the three Tripode [1] that fostered the teaching of Jacques Lacan in Italy.
Born in New York from parents of middle European Ashkenazi descent she was educated at Columbia University. She won a Fulbright scholarship to study medicine in Paris. There she studied psychoanalysis under the direct tuition of Jacques Lacan and went on to work with many French exponents of his discipline, including Françoise Dolto, Maud Mannoni, Moustapha Safouan. She was one of the founders of École Freudienne de Paris. [2]
Consistent with Lacan's 1973 Letter to the Italians, [3] [4] [5] in which she is nominated along with Contri and Verdiglione, she transferred to work in Rome, where she fostered Lacan's teaching.
In 1983, she founded the Psychoanalytic Association Cosa Freudiana [6] to which she also acted as chairperson. [7]
In 2002, in conjunction with the Italian Ministry of Education, Universities and she founded the Laboratorio Freudiano [8] where she acted as both director and teacher.
She is remembered [1] as a valued member of the Association Lacanienne Internationale. [9]
Mostly in French or Italian: