Thea Bauriedl

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Thea Bauriedl (* 25. July 1938 in Berlin as Thea Kraus ) is an in Munich living psychologist and psychoanalyst . She runs a practice and teaches clinical psychology at the Ludwig Maximilians University . She is considered the founder of relationship analysis, a further development of psychoanalysis as a relationship theory. She is co-editor of the magazine for political psychoanalysis and on the advisory board of the Humanist Union . She is also a member of Attac's scientific advisory board .

life and work

Thea Kraus attended schools in Tyrol , Upper Bavaria and Munich, which she graduated from high school in 1956. She then studied music in Munich and languages ​​in Geneva . She has two daughters from her first marriage to Ruprecht Bauriedl. In 1966 she began to study psychology , philosophy and psychopathology . Bauriedl was an assistant at the Institute for Psychology at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich from 1971 to 1975. In 1975 she completed her doctorate with a thesis on theoretical problems in ego-psychological diagnostics . From 1971 to 1978 she trained as a psychoanalyst in Munich. In 1985 she completed her habilitation in Munich. Thea Bauriedl has been training and teaching at the Munich Academy for Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy since 1981 . Since 1986 she has headed the Institute for Political Psychoanalysis she established . She has been a training analyst since 1989 . Bauriedl holds numerous functions and honorary offices, especially in the field of peace and conflict research .

Thea Bauriedl has been interested in relationships and their analysis since the beginning of her studies . She took a position on the psychotherapeutic process, on questions of analytical abstinence and ethics . She published in particular on all facets of relationships and couples therapy , without a couch, and dealt with manipulative and suggestive methods of psychotherapy.

Bauriedl's concept of relationship analysis is a further development of the object relationship theory according to Melanie Klein and can be seen as related to the concept of interpersonal psychoanalysis developed in the United States in the 1970s by Erik H. Erikson or Harry Stack Sullivan . The patient-therapist relationship is viewed as largely symmetrical; there is a largely unconscious entanglement of transference and countertransference . Bauriedl's central contribution to the mechanisms of action of this form of therapy reads: “Change begins in the therapist.” Bauriedl thus directs the attention of the academic discourse to practical questions such as setting and abstinence . According to Bauriedl, the analyst must repeatedly bring himself into that state of inner equilibrium and thus offer the analysand a psychological freedom in which he - in free association according to Freud - can find, name and thus integrate previously repressed feelings and fantasies.

Thea Bauriedl is married to Friedrich Wölpert for the second time and has two daughters and a son.

Works

Books as a sole author
  • 1980: Relationship Analysis. The dialectical-emancipatory principle of psychoanalysis and its consequences for family therapy. Suhrkamp, ​​1980, ISBN 3-518072919 .
  • 1982: between adaptation and conflict. Theoretical problems of ego-psychological diagnosis. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht , Göttingen 1982, ISBN 3-525454066 .
  • 1985: Psychoanalysis without a couch. On the theory and practice of applied psychoanalysis. Urban and Schwarzenberg, Munich 1985, ISBN 3-54114341X .
  • 1986: The return of the repressed. Psychoanalysis, politics and the individual. Piper, 1986, ISBN 3-492030254 . New edition Piper, 1988, ISBN 3-49210892X .
  • 1988: Risking Your Life. Psychoanalytic Perspectives of Political Resistance. Piper 1988, ISBN 3-492032044 .
  • 1992: Ways out of violence. Analysis of Relationships. Herder, Freiburg 1992, ISBN 3-451041294 .
    • 2001: ways out of violence. Liberation from the web of enemy images. Complete edit again Edition, Herder, 2001, ISBN 3-451051478 .
  • 1994: Even without a couch. Psychoanalysis as a relationship theory and its applications. Verlag Internationale Psychoanalyse, Stuttgart 1994, ISBN 3-608917004 .
  • 1996: Living in Relationships. The need to find limits. Herder, Freiburg 1996, ISBN 3-451044838 .

Articles in compilations and magazines

  • Balint groups. In: Wolfgang Mertens : Psychoanalysis. A manual in key terms. Urban & Schwarzenberg, Munich 1983, pp. 112-122.
  • Is the revolutionary potential of psychoanalysis being lost? Thoughts on the political significance of psychoanalysis and the political commitment of psychoanalysts. In: Psyche. 38, 1984, pp. 489-515.
  • The lifting of unconsciousness in Balint groups. A politically significant process. In: Supervision. 8, 1985, pp. 55-59.
  • Enemy images: images against fear. In: Notes from the Institute for Political Psychoanalysis Munich. 7, 1987, pp. 68-84. (Also in Thea Bauriedl 1992, violence. )
  • On the psycho-ecology of violence. In: Ch. Rohde-Dachser (Ed.): Damage. Psychoanalytic diagnoses of time. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 1992.
  • The danger must remain accessible. On the ethical problem of dealing with radioactive waste from a psychoanalytical point of view. In: Notes from the Institute for Political Psychoanalysis Munich. 10/11, 1993, pp. 66-74.
  • Psychoanalytic Perspectives in Supervision. In: Supervision. 23, 1993, pp. 9-35.
  • The dynamics of sexual abuse. In: KiZ. 1999, pp. 62-74.
  • In search of the footsteps of the fathers. A critical analysis. In: Thea Bauriedl, Astrid Brundke (ed.): Psychoanalysis in Munich. A search for clues. Psychosozial, Munich 2008, ISBN 978-3-898068499 , pp. 111-191.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. G. Stumm et al.: Personal dictionary of psychotherapy. Vienna / New York 2005, p. 34 f.
  2. Members of the Attac Scientific Advisory Board ( Memento from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) (January 2016)
  3. Hildegard Baumsart: Lesson with Kassandra. In: The time. October 3, 1986, accessed July 20, 2011 .