Browsing Faculty Scholarship - Psychiatry Department by Creation Date
Now showing items 21-40 of 56
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Psalm Echoes in Shakespeare's "1 Henry VI," "Richard II," and "Edward III"
(Oxford Journals, 2010)This note will supplement past work which documents that Sternhold and Hopkins’ Whole Book of Psalms (WBP) was a major literary source for Shakespeare’s plays, Sonnets, and The Rape of Lucrece. I will examine three history ... -
The Discovery of a Major New Literary Source for Shakespeare's Works in the de Vere Geneva Bible
(Shakespeare Fellowship, 2010) -
Sonnet 6 and the First Marked Passage in De Vere's Bible
(Shakespeare Fellowship, 2010) -
Psychoanalyse und die Verfasserschaftsfrage
(Neue Shake-speare Gesellschaft, 2010) -
Psychiatry's Retreat from Patients: Some Possible Solutions
(Guilford Press, 2010)As it becomes a more biologically oriented specialty, psychiatry is at risk of forgetting relevant psychoanalytic insights, such as the meaning of the psychiatrist's countertransference to the patient. -
The Arte of English Poesie: The Case for Edward de Vere's [Shakespeare's] Authorship
(Shakespeare Fellowship, 2010)I challenge the traditional attribution of the 1589 "Arte of English Poesie" to George Puttenham. The psychological and methodological obstacles one must overcome in making such a case mirror those faced in challenging the ... -
The Sternhold and Hopkins Whole Book of Psalms Offers Crucial Evidence of de Vere's Authorship of the Works of Shakespeare.
(Shakespeare Fellowship, 2011) -
Shakespeare's Sonnet 80, Marlowe, and Hero and Leander
(Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship, 2011) -
Sullivan and His Polarizing Legacy
(Guilford Press, 2012) -
Did Sir Walter Ralegh Have Access to an Early Draft of Venus and Adonis?
(Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship, 2012) -
Biblical Sources for Shakespeare's Sonnets 24 and 33, and for Henry VIII: Implications for de Vere's Authorship
(Shakespeare Fellowship, 2012) -
The Loss of an Institution: Mourning Chestnut Lodge
(Columbia University Press, 2013)"The unexpected loss of a client can be a lonely and isolating experience for therapists. While family and friends can ritually mourn the deceased, the nature of the therapeutic relationship prohibits therapists from ... -
A Source for 'Rememberance of Things Past' in Sonnet 30
(Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship, 2013)