000324013 000__ 02998cam\a22002533\\4500 000324013 001__ 324013 000324013 005__ 20210513120427.0 000324013 008__ 080416s2008\\\\nyua\\\\\b\\\\001\0\eng\d 000324013 020__ $$a9781590513033 (pbk.) 000324013 020__ $$a1590513037 (pbk.) 000324013 035__ $$a(OCoLC)ocn224896632 000324013 035__ $$a324013 000324013 040__ $$aYDXCP$$cYDXCP$$dBAKER 000324013 049__ $$aISEA 000324013 090__ $$aRC438.6.K48$$bH67 2008 000324013 1001_ $$aHopkins, Linda$$q(Linda B.) 000324013 24500 $$aFalse self :$$bthe life of Masud Khan /$$cLinda Hopkins. 000324013 260__ $$aNew York :$$bOther Press,$$c2008 000324013 300__ $$axxvi, 525 p., [8] p. of plates :$$bill. ;$$c25 cm. 000324013 504__ $$aIncludes bibliographical references (p. [497]-512) and index. 000324013 5050_ $$aEarly years in Montgomery -- A feudal upbringing -- A misunderstanding -- First years of training and personal life in the West -- Settling in and starting analysis with Winnicott -- Early clinical work (interviews) -- Masud and Svetlana -- Working in a time of revolution -- Clinical work (interviews) -- The curative friendships -- Wladimir Granoff -- The Stollers -- True self -- Regression to dependence -- Play therapy for adults -- Perversions and issues of sexual identity -- Editorial work and promotion of Winnicott -- The false self -- Disgrace in Amsterdam -- Losing his anchors -- Lying fallow -- The dying of a marriage -- Clinical work (interviews) -- Victor Smirnoff -- "The most traumatic year" -- The absence of Winnicott -- Bad dreams -- The alcoholic solution -- Clinical work (interviews) -- Moving on -- Fortune, good night -- Survival -- Analysis with Robert Stoller -- Murder, frenzy and madness: reading Dostoevsky -- Fortune smiles: last love -- Late clinical work (interviews) -- The shadow of a man -- Death of a madman -- Posthumous. 000324013 520__ $$aGifted psychoanalyst and generational bĂȘte noire, M. Masud R. Khan (1924-1989), through his candor and scandalous behavior, exposed the bigotry of his proponents-turned-detractors. The son of a wealthy landowner in rural India (now Pakistan), Khan grew up in a world of privilege radically different from the Western lifestyle he would adopt after moving to London. Notorious for his flamboyant personality and, at first, acknowledged as a brilliant clinician, Khan was closely connected to many creative and accomplished individuals, including Donald Woods Winnicott, Anna Freud, Robert Stoller, Michael Redgrave, Julie Andrews, Rudolph Nureyev, and many more. Khan's subsequent downfall offers interesting insights not only into his psychic fragility but into the world of intrigues and deceptions pervasive in the psychoanalytic community of the time. Psychologist Hopkins makes use of unprecedented access to a complete copy of Khan's unpublished Work Books, as well as interviews with Khan's peers, relatives, and analysands in order to provide a balanced account of Khan as a talented and deeply conflicted individual.--From publisher description. 000324013 60010 $$aKhan, M. Masud R. 000324013 650_0 $$aPsychoanalysts$$zGreat Britain$$vBiography. 000324013 85200 $$bgen$$hRC438.6.K48$$iH67$$i2008 000324013 909CO $$ooai:library.usi.edu:324013$$pGLOBAL_SET 000324013 980__ $$aBIB 000324013 980__ $$aBOOK