Break with Psychoanalysis & the Creation of Transactional Analysis
Probably the most significant traces of the origins of transactional
analysis are contained in the first five of six articles on intuition Berne
wrote beginning in 1949. Already, at that early date, when he was still
working to gain the status of psychoanalyst, he dared to defy Freudian
concepts of the unconscious in his writings. When he began training in 1941
at the New York Psychoanalytic Institute, and later when he resumed his
training at the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Institute, Eric Berne obviously
believed that becoming a psychoanalyst was important. However, in the end
that coveted title was withheld; his 1956 application for membership was
turned down with the verdict that he wasn't ready, but, perhaps after three
or four more years of personal analysis and training he might reapply. For
Eric the rejection was galvanizing, spurring him to intensify his
long-standing ambition to add something new to psychoanalysis. He set to
work, determined to develop a new approach to psychotherapy by himself.
Before 1956 was out, he had written two seminal papers based on material
read earlier that year at the Psychiatric Clinic, Mt. Zion Hospital, San
Francisco, and at the Langley Porter Neuropsychiatric Clinic, U.C. Medical
School: "Intuition V: The Ego Image": and "Ego States in
Psychotherapy." Using references to P. Federn, E. Kann, and H. Silberer,
in the first article Berne indicated how he arrived at the concept of ego
states and where he got the idea of separating "adult" from "child." In the
next article he developed the tripartite scheme used today (Parent, Adult,
and Child), introduced the three-circle method of diagramming it, showed how
to sketch contaminations, labeled the theory, "structural analysis" and
termed it "a new psychotherapeutic approach." The third article, titled "Transactional
Analysis: A New and Effective Method of Group Therapy," was written a
few months later and presented by invitation at the 1957 Western Regional
Meeting of the American Group Psychotherapy Association of Los Angeles. With
the publication of this paper in the 1958 issue of the American Journal of
Psychotherapy, transactional analysis, the name of Berne's new method of
diagnosis and treatment, became a permanent part of the psychotherapeutic
literature. In addition to restating his concepts of P-A-C, structural
analysis, and ego states, the 1957 paper added the important new features of
games and scripts. Berne went on to publish
Games People Play
in 1964 where he introduced games and Transactional Analysis to a more
widespread audience.
|