Albert J. Solnit Explained

Albert Jay Solnit (August 26, 1919 – June 21, 2002) was an American psychoanalyst in the tradition of ego psychology He was an advocate of privileging children's needs in child custody cases. Solnit began teaching at the Yale School of Medicine in 1952 and was Sterling Professor of Psychiatry from 1970 to 1990.[1] He was an editor of The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child from 1980 to 2002.[2]

Thematic interests

Solnit saw play as a signature expression of the child's personality - something he linked to Winnicott's concept of the transitional object.[2]

Solnit also emphasised the importance in an ongoing life of constructing "a useful and self-respecting past...a crucial aspect of the individual's sense of free will is a knowledge of his own history that does not dominate".[3]

In a series of books co-authored with Anna Freud and legal scholar Joseph Goldstein, he stressed the importance of the psychological needs of the child in custody law.[4]

Bibliography

Sole-authored works

Co-authored volumes

Edited volumes

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: In Memoriam: Renowned Yale Child Psychiatrist Albert J. Solnit . YaleNews . Yale University Office of Public Affairs & Communications . 25 June 2002 . 5 August 2016.
  2. L. W. Raymond ed., The Inward Eye (2013)
  3. Quoted in David Lowenthal, The Past is a Foreign Country (Cambridge 997) p. xxiv
  4. News: O'Connor . Anahad . Dr. Albert Solnit, Advocate of Child's Needs, Dies at 82 . New York Times . 27 June 2002 . 5 May 2014.