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Four shrinks on the season finale of The Sopranos.

Cosa Nostra

Posted Wednesday, May 23, 2001, at 11:41 AM ET

Dear Glen, Peggy, and Phil,

I would like to conclude the season with one final observation. Insofar as our weekly discussion of The Sopranos has attracted a sizable readership--and the Slate people tell us it has--this deserves some comment. It may not be obvious at first, but some of the same things that make people curious about the Mafia also make them curious about psychoanalysis. For we too appear as a closed organization, with our own initiation rights, rituals, vocabulary, practices, and codes of conduct. This, combined with the fact that we deal with the fundamental issues of life--love, sexuality, intimacy, separation, loss, aggression, and death--makes people naturally interested in finding out what we're about, just as they are interested in learning about the workings of the Mafia.

Currently, psychoanalysis has a rather bad image in the public eye. It is often seen as insular, stuck in the past, dogmatic, arrogant--and, in general, rigid and uptight. Now, I don't believe it is either possible or desirable to remove the cultic elements from analysis altogether. (This requires a long discussion.) But if, through our exchanges, we have been able to show that analysts can be open, involved in contemporary culture, can disagree with one another, have a sense of humor about themselves and the world, and enjoy themselves at the same time, we have accomplished something for "this thing of ours."

Joel

Cosa Nostra

Posted Wednesday, May 23, 2001, at 11:41 AM ET
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This spring, Slate will ask Dr. Melfi's real-life counterparts to examine developments on The Sopranos. Glen O. Gabbard, M.D., is a professor of psychoanalysis at the Menninger Clinic and co-author of Psychiatry and the Cinema. Philip A. Ringstrom, Ph.D., Psy.D., is an analyst at the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles and a full-time practitioner. Joel Whitebook, a practicing analyst in New York, is on the faculty of the Columbia Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research. Margaret Crastnopol, Ph.D., is on the faculty of the Northwest Center for Psychoanalysis and a practicing psychologist/psychoanalyst in Seattle. Click here to comment on Sunday night's episode and here to read this series from the beginning.
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