Stephen Rex Dames is a recent graduate of Columbia University. He wrote his senior thesis on the history of British non-medical psychoanalysis, arguing that out of various labor and gender conflicts surrounding “lay analysis” in early twentieth-century Britain, certain defining aspects of the modern psychoanalytic profession were born. This thesis—entitled Lay Labour and Analytic Conflict: The Development and Character of British Non-Medical Psychoanalysis, 1893-1930—received departmental honors and the Albert Marion Elsberg Modern History Prize from the university. He is also the recipient of the 2024 APsA Undergraduate Essay Prize for his paper entitled “A Son’s Shibboleth: Freud, Fatherhood, and the Faith of Psychoanalysis,” an essay on a few discrete connections between the use of the word shibboleth in Freud’s work and the nature of the psychoanalytic profession. He currently works as an editorial intern at n+1 magazine.
Stephen Dames
Writer
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Sep 20th
2025
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2025
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Resurgence of Freud
This roundtable explores the resurgence of psychoanalysis, examining its enduring appeal despite scientific criticism and changing therapeutic practices. It considers how Freudian ideas continue to influence therapy, the humanities, and contemporary debates in the age of AI.