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Louis Zinkin
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    Louis Zinkin

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    Louis Zinkin
    Born
    Louis Maurice Zinkin

    24 April 1925
    London
    Died 13 March 1993
    London
    Nationality British
    Alma mater Lincoln College, Oxford
    Occupation(s) Medical doctor, FRCPsych, analytical psychologist, group analyst
    Years active 1952-1993
    Known for Contributions to Analytical Psychology and Group Analysis
    Spouse Hindle Lewicki Zinkin
    Children 2

    Louis Maurice Zinkin (1925 April 24, 1925 – 13 March 1993) was a British analytical psychologist. Earlier in life he had been a ship's surgeon, a physician, a child psychiatrist and Consultant Psychotherapist at St George's Hospital, London. He had the distinction of being a Group Analyst alongside individual and couple work and was the author of many papers and books.


    Biography

    With a scholarly Jewish ancestry founded in Russian occupied Poland, Zinkin's grandfather, Jacob, escaped the oppressive Pale of Settlement and found sanctuary in 19th century England. After attending City of London School, Louis progressed to Lincoln College, Oxford, where he discovered the writings of Carl Jung while studying medicine. He gained his MD in London and set off for the Far East on board ship. On his return to the UK he worked in several hospitals working his way through medical rotations and specialisms. While at Napsbury Hospital, he trained as an analytical psychologist and rose to becoming honorary senior lecturer at St George's Hospital at Hyde Park Corner and Chairman of the Medical Committee of the British Psychological Society. His teaching load at the hospital and at the Society of Analytical Psychology did not prevent him from becoming himself a patient at the Institute of Group Analysis whence he emerged as a group analyst and later training analyst. In the final decade of his life, he applied with his wife, Hindle Lewicki also a psychotherapist, his rich clinical experience to interventions through couples therapy. From the early 1980s he was dogged by increasingly impaired vision and died suddenly at the relatively young age of 67. He and Hindle had two children.

    Influence

    As well as an abiding involvement in music, he took up the piano in mid-life, Louis Zinkin viewed the arts through the prism of his clinical reading and work and produced a study of the characters in Thomas Mann's Death in Venice following the release of Luchino Visconti's film. He was galvanised to think about the themes, such as pedophilia and Jung's concept of individuation, evoked by the novella in a number of his patients who reported seeing the film based on it, and the effects it had on them. Following Martin Buber who had a correspondence with Jung, Zinkin's approach was often to engage in dialogue with colleagues. In the group analytic field he took on the psychoanalyst Malcolm Pines on the nature of mirroring, suggesting it was not merely benign as Pines had it, but could be much more paradoxical, even malign. His original (1991) contribution to the debate on the nature of the self reverberates in discussions decades after his death. Much like Jung's, Zinkin's attitude was characterised by the idea of a search, whether as a thinker, therapist, teacher or committee member. He was regarded as always curious and courageous in exploring intellectual boundaries.

    Select bibliography

    • Person to Person: The Search for the Human Dimension in Psychotherapy (1978)
    • Is there still a Place for the Medical Model (1983)
    • The Hologram as a Model for Analytical Psychology (1987)
    • A Gnostic View of the Therapy Group (1989)
    • Dialogue in the Analytic Setting: Selected Papers of Louis Zinkin on Jung and on Group Analysis (1998)
    • The Psyche and the Social World with the psychologist, Dennis Brown (2000)
    • Your Self: did you find it or did you make it? (1991/2008)

    Further reading

    • Morley, Ann. "Processes and Paradox of the Self". Holistic Science Journal.
    • Schwartz-Salant, N. (1985). "Comment on Louis Zinkin's "Paradoxes of the self". The Journal of Analytical Psychology, 30(1), 19–23. 30: 19–23. doi:10.1111/j.1465-5922.1985.00019.x. This is a response to L. Zinkin's (see record 1985-30871-001) commentary about the paradoxical nature of the self and about the debate between J. Redfearn (see record 1984-04034-001) and the present author (see record 1984-04038-001) on these paradoxes. The synthesis of Freudian and Jungian thought on the matter and Jung's axiom of Maria and projective identification are considered. (8 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved.


    External links


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