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  • Contributors

John C. Burnham is Research Professor of History at Ohio State University and an Associated Scholar in the Medical Heritage Center there. He has published many articles and books in the history of psychoanalysis, psychology, and medicine, including most recently Accident Prone: A History of Technology, Psychology, and Misfits of the Machine Age (University of Chicago, 2009). He is also editor of After Freud Left: A Century of Psychoanalysis in America (University of Chicago, 2012).

Benjamin A. Galatzer-Levy is a Ph.D. candidate in philosophy at Southern Illinois University and resident philosopher at the Institute for Clinical Social Work. He has published and presented work on the intersection of psychoanalysis and philosophy. His primary research interests are in ethics, critical theory, and philosophy of psychoanalysis.

Robert M. Galatzer-Levy, M. D. serves on the faculties of the Chicago Psychoanalytic Institute and the University of Chicago. His professional interests include clinical psychoanalysis, non-linear dynamics, and the relationship between law and psychoanalysis.

Michael Molnar was employed at the Freud Museum, London, from 1986 to 2009. He edited The Diary of Sigmund Freud 1929–1939 (Scribner’s, 1992) and co-edited Freud’s travel letters (published in German by Aufbau, 2002). He has written a series of articles on photographs from the Freud Museum archive and published in the journals Psychoanalysis and History and Luzifer-Amor.

Ellen Pinsky is on the faculty of the Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute and serves on the Editorial Board of the Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association. Before graduating [End Page 161] from BPSI in 2006, she learned to be a psychologist, counselor, and shepherd of aspiring writers during twenty-three years as a teacher of junior high school English. Her recent essay, “The Olympian Delusion” (Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 2011), received BPSI’s Deutsch Prize. Her writing has also appeared in The Threepenny Review and Salmagundi.

Murray M. Schwartz teaches literature, psychoanalysis, and Holocaust studies at Emerson College in Boston. He has written many essays on Shakespeare, psychoanalytic theory, and poetry, and has co-edited several anthologies, including Representing Shakespeare: New Psychoanalytic Essays (Johns Hopkins University, 1980). With Norman N. Holland, he wrote Know Thyself: Delphi Seminars (PsyArt, 2011). He and Peggy Schwartz recently published The Dance Claimed Me: A Biography of Pearl Primus (Yale University, 2011). For several decades he was a dean or provost at private and public colleges. He is a scholar member of the Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute. [End Page 162]

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