Robert C. Bak Explained

Robert C. Bak (1908–1974) was a Hungarian-born psychoanalyst who moved to the United States in 1941, and eventually became President of the New York Psychoanalytic Society.

Training and career

Bak underwent a training analysis with Imre Hermann and joined the Hungarian Psychoanalytic Society in 1938, only to be forced to flee to the United States a few years later, where he became a training analyst in 1947, and president of the New York Psychoanalytic Society in 1957.[1]

He published some 25 articles in Hungarian, German, and English. From the start, Bak was concerned to chart early object relations, and their distortions:[2] he saw the sexual perversions as attempts to undo object separation,[3] and also charted the emergence of grandiosity in ego-regression.[4]

Bak also reiterated the importance of the idea of the phallic mother in the perverse denial of castration.[5]

Characteristics

A flamboyant and witty lover of the good life,[6] Bak had a troubled marital relationship, and no children.[7]

When asked whether or not he would describe as transference a relationship in which each party saw the other through a veil of unconscious fantasy, instead of as they were, he is said to have replied ironically, "I'd call that life".[8]

Selected writings

External links

Notes and References

  1. J. Meszaros, Ferenczi and Beyond (2014) p. 162–164
  2. [Otto Fenichel]
  3. S. Taylor, Hans Bellmer (2002) p. 187
  4. Otto Fenichel, The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis (1946) p. 421 and 595
  5. E. Becker, The Denial of Death (2007) p. 224
  6. W. S. Poland, Meeting the Darkness (1996) p. 176
  7. J. Meszaros, Ferenczi and Beyond (2014) p. 20
  8. [Janet Malcolm]