ABSTRACT

How to Be Intimate with 15,000,000 Strangers is an investigation into how the fields of mental health and media can work together more collaboratively.

Drawing upon his extensive experience in media psychoanalysis, Brett Kahr explores how a rich collaboration with radio, television, film, and other forms of public outreach can be accomplished while also embracing the weight and gravitas of depth psychology. In addition to describing his work as Resident Psychotherapist at the B.B.C., Kahr also examines the ways in which references to the media enter the consulting room and provide clinicians with important insights about hidden aspects of the minds of their patients. Moreover, he investigates the historical hesitancy of psychoanalysts – experts in confidentiality – to engage with such a public arena as the media, thus providing important insights about how one can collaborate broadly and loudly while also maintaining one’s ethical commitment to silence and privacy.

This book will be of interest to psychoanalysts, psychotherapists, and anyone intrigued by the intersection between media and psychoanalysis.

chapter |5 pages

Prologue

How to Publicise Psychoanalysis

part Section I|11 pages

Introduction to Media Psychoanalysis

chapter 1|9 pages

The Bulimic Lorry Driver

Championing the Media in Spite of Hesitancy and Envy

part Section II|58 pages

Media Psychoanalysis in Action

chapter 2|9 pages

“You have five minutes to cure the nation”

My Years at the B.B.C.

chapter 4|23 pages

Making Slough Happy

A Television Experiment

chapter 5|10 pages

On Stage at the Royal Opera House

part Section III|25 pages

Television in the Consulting Room

chapter 6|13 pages

Television as Rorschach

The Unconscious Use of the Cathode Nipple

chapter 7|10 pages

Dr. Paul Weston and the Bloodstained Couch

Some Critical Comments on In Treatment

part Section IV|40 pages

Celebrity and the Psyche

chapter 8|23 pages

Fame and the Unconscious

Toxic and Inspiring Aspects of Celebrity Culture

chapter 9|15 pages

On Not Being Shakespeare, Mozart, or Picasso

Creativity, Bereavement, and the Wish to Be Famous

part Section V|55 pages

Uneasy Bedfellows

chapter 10|18 pages

Media Monasticism and Media Whoredom

The Uncomfortable Marriage Between Psychoanalysis and Popular Exposure

chapter 11|35 pages

“I think analysts are not very good as broadcasters”

Donald Winnicott's Contribution to Media Psychology

chapter |13 pages

Conclusion

The Future of Media Psychoanalysis