Thomas Ogden


Thomas Ogden is a psychoanalyst and writer, of both psychoanalytic and fiction books, who lives and works in San Francisco, California.
Ogden received a BA from Amherst College, MA, and an MD from Yale, where he also completed a psychiatric residency. He served for a year as an Associate Psychiatrist at the Tavistock Clinic in London, and did his psychoanalytic training at the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Institute, where he has remained on the faculty. For more than 25 years he has served as Director of the Center for the Advanced Study of the Psychoses. He has also been a member of the North American Editorial Board for the International Journal of Psychoanalysis, and Psychoanalytic Dialogues.
Ogden is a supervising and personal analyst at the Psychoanalytic Institute of Northern California.

Psychoanalytic approach

Ogden has been referred to as "a poet's psychoanalyst — someone who listens to his patients on the level of voice, metaphor."
Gregorio Kohon, of the British Psychoanalytical Society, remarks that "Ogden belongs to that rare group of psychoanalysts who are also good writers. ...he re-creates the vitality of his own dream-life through creative readings of poetry and the unspoken, of fiction and mourning, of analytic sensibility and the aliveness of language. Ogden transforms the relationship between reader and writer into a fruitful and intimate dialogue. One's own reveries, ruminations, daydreams, memories, and - of course - dreams, become part of the conversation with him."
In his own words, Ogden has described how his "position in the analytic world has not been that of an advocate of a school of psychoanalysis Neither do I view myself as a 'lone voice', because that suggests that I think of myself as a renegade. I would much prefer to describe myself as an independent thinker."
Thomas Ogden’s style and personal contributions to psychoanalysis include:
Ogden's honors include the 2004 International Journal of Psychoanalysis Award for the Most Important Paper of the year; the 2010 Haskell Norman Prize, an international award for Outstanding Achievement in Psychoanalysis; the 2012 Sigourney Award.; and the 2014 Hans Loewald Award for Distinguished Contribution to Psychoanalytic Education.