105A: Technique I: Basics of Clinical Psychoanalytic Diagnosis

Course Description

Instructors

Lisa Deutscher, M.D.

November 12, 2025  – January 7, 2026
Wednesdays, 7:00 – 8:20 pm

No class: 11/26, 12/24, 12/31

To attend this course remotely, please click here

Course Description

This course will explore how different approaches to psychoanalytic diagnosis can be used clinically, and how they differ from psychiatric diagnosis, with which the students may be more familiar. We will start with Freud’s 1916 writing on Character Types, paying particular attention to The Exception as an example of how a person’s whole mode of operating may be guided by a largely unconscious overarching idea. We then move on to review parts of the PDM and examine its focus on assessing a range of functioning, including mental life. We will make use of David Shapiro’s approach as outlined in Neurotic Styles to look at the whole person and the continuum from functional adaptations to neurosis to more severe pathology. We will also examine one or two syndromes by way of a case presentation, but we will not attempt to review all of the diagnostic categories.

Course Objectives

Upon completion of this course, participants should be able to:

  1. describe the historical development of psychoanalytic diagnosis, including the contributions of ego psychology and object relations points of view.
  2. differentiate between psychiatric and psychoanalytic diagnosis, paying attention to the differences in concepts of psychopathology as well as the use  of the interaction between analyst and patient in psychoanalysis.

Evaluation Method

Each student’s participation in class discussion and demonstration of understanding of the course objectives, readings and clinical material is assessed in a written evaluation by the instructor(s).

Continuing Education

Psychologists

New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute is recognized by the New York State Education Department’s State Board for Psychology as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed psychologists #PSY – 0073.

New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education programs for psychologists. New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute maintains responsibility for this program and its content. DISCLOSURE: None of the planners and presenters of this CE program has any relevant financial relationships to disclose.

Social Workers

New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute is recognized by the New York State Education Department’s State Board for Social Work as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed social workers #SW – 0317.

Physicians
ACCME Accreditation Statement
This activity has been planned and implemented in accordance with the accreditation requirements and policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) through the joint providership of American Psychoanalytic Association and New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute. The American Psychoanalytic Association is accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
AMA Credit Designation Statement
The American Psychoanalytic Association designates this live activity for a maximum of [9] AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
Disclosure Statement
The APsA CE Committee has reviewed the materials for accredited continuing education and has determined that this activity is not related to the product line of ineligible companies and therefore, the activity meets the exception outlined in Standard 3: ACCME’s identification, mitigation and disclosure of relevant financial relationship. This activity does not have any known commercial support.
Schedule of Classes & Course Readings

These articles are protected under relevant copyright regulations. They are available in the New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute Electronic Reserve for your convenience, and for your personal use.

READINGS FOR 2025 ARE CONFIRMED.

To attend this course remotely, please click here

I. Overview of Psychoanalytic Diagnosis

CLASS 1: November 12, 2025

Study Questions:

For Freud–
  1. Can you think of any patient whom you’ve encountered who demonstrates seeing themself as an exception deserving of special treatment?  You may also give an example from literature or of someone you’ve known in a non-clinical setting.
For Lingiardi–
  1. What was an aspect of the rationale for developing the PDM?
  2. What have been two of the problems historically with psychodynamic diagnostic formulations?
For Monti and D’Agostino–
  1. Can you think of any patient with depression in whom you can understand a narrative that is intertwined with their depression?

Freud, S. (1916). Some Character-Types Met with in Psycho-Analytic Work. The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, Volume XIV (1914-1916): On the History of the Psycho-Analytic Movement, Papers on Metapsychology and Other Works, 309-333. [Read especially pp. 310-315]

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Lingiardi, V. & McWilliams, N. (2017). Psychodynamic Diagnostic Manual (Second Edition). New York: Gillford Press. Introduction, 1-14 , Comparison of PDM-2 with other Diagnostic Systems, 68-74 .

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Monti, M. R. & D’Agostino, A. (2018) Diagnosis or Diagnosing? From Symptoms to a Phenomenological-Psychoanalytic Stance on the Patient’s World. Psychoanalytic Review, 105:209-222.

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II. Levels of Personality Organization

CLASS 2: November 19, 2025
For McWilliams–
1.How do we use ego psychology in making a diagnosis? (See esp. pp. 25-28)
2. How do ideas from object relations theory help us to use countertransference in making a diagnosis?
For Kernberg–
1.  According to Kernberg, what is the origin of the primitive transference seen in borderline patients?
2.  How can the interviewer assess the patient’s object relations? (See esp, pp14-15)
REQUIRED READINGS

McWilliams, N. (1994).  Psychoanalytic Diagnosis: Understanding personality structure in the clinical process. New York: The Guilford Press. [Read pp. 19-34]

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Kernberg, O. (1984).  Severe Personality Disorders. New Haven: Yale U. Press.  [Read Chapter 1: Structural Diagnosis, pp. 3-26]

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III. The Whole Patient and Case Presentation One

CLASS 3: December 3, 2025

These readings will be discussed in the context of a case presentation during this class.

As you read the Shapiro introduction and chapters, try to think of patients you’ve seen who demonstrate some of the key characteristics of each style. Also, be prepared to listen to the case presentations we will hear and to think about how they do or do not illustrate the “types” described in the chapters (Obsessional for class III, Hysterical for Class V.)
REQUIRED READINGS

Shapiro, D. (1965). Introduction. In Neurotic Styles. New York: Basic Books, pp. 1-22.

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Shapiro, D. (1965). Obsessive-Compulsive Style. In Neurotic Styles. New York: Basic Books, pp. 23-53.

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IV. Impact of Race and Culture on Diagnosis

CLASS 4: December 10, 2025

We will discuss the possible influences of the culture and race of both analyst and patient in forming a diagnosis.  We will also have a guest presenter who will present a relevant case.

REQUIRED READINGS

Wallerstein, H.  Hunting the Real: Psychosis and Race in the American Hospital, 2020,  Psychoanalytic Perspectives, (17)(3): 257-271

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Spiegel, J.  Cultural Aspects of Transference and Countertransference Revisited, 1976, J. Am. Acad. Psychoanal. Dyn. Psychiatr., (4)(4):447-467

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V. Case Presentation Two

CLASS 5: December 17, 2025

As you read the Shapiro introduction and chapters, try to think of patients you’ve seen who demonstrate some of the key characteristics of each style. Also, be prepared to listen to the case presentations we will hear and to think about how they do or do not illustrate the “types” described in the chapters (Obsessional for class III, Hysterical for Class V.)

REQUIRED READINGS

Shapiro, D. (1965). Hysterical Style. In Neurotic Styles. New York: Basic Books, pp. 108-133.

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VI. Thinking About Diagnosis via a Work of Literature

CLASS 6: January 7, 2026

In this class, we will read a few brief excerpts from the novel  The Corrections, and, thinking of the protagonist as a patient, we will consider symptoms, character, countertransference, and other issues as they relate to psychoanalytic diagnosis.

The story is told from the viewpoints of each member of the Lambert family (parents Enid and Alfred and their adult children Gary, Chip, and Denise).  The first chapter (not assigned) describes Alfred and Enid’s preparations for an upcoming cruise and a visit to Chip.

Thinking of Chip as your patient, imagine that Selection 1 is what he tells you at the first session. He returns and gives you more background, and we also learn about the arrival of Denise for the visit (Selection 2).  In Selection 3, Chip tells you more about his life prior to the day you met him, and in Selection 4 he recounts a conversation he had with Denise a while back.

In the novel, in the months following the lunch, a series of entanglements has led Chip to travel to Eastern Europe as a participant in a corrupt money-making scheme.  In Selections 5 and 6, we encounter him as he is fleeing from Lithuania to reach his parents’ house in the Midwest.

Study questions:

Please prepare answers to these questions to be discussed in class.

1. After reading Selection 1, what is your impression of Chip?  What is your emotional reaction to him and what he tells you–countertransference?

2. As you continue reading, consider what might be causing his suffering.  Think about family dynamics and how they are represented in his mind,  sense of self, cultural factors, substance abuse, and anything else.

3. What is he feeling and trying not to feel?  How does he avoid these feelings, consciously or unconsciously (defenses)?

4. What can you say about Chip’s identity?  How stable or fluid is it?

5.  What might the challenges in treatment be?  How does what you know of Chip so far suggest how the transference might evolve?

REQUIRED READINGS

The Corrections, J. Franzen, Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, New York, 2001 (Paperback ed. 2021). Note that all the selections are part of one file.

Selection 1–pp. 15-24

Selection 2–pp. 32-34

Selection 3–bottom p.89 to top p.98

Selection 4–p.523 only

Selection 5–pp. 534-540

Selection 6–pp. 544-549

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SUPPLEMENTAL READING

The rest of the book, if you enjoy reading fiction and when you have time.