Abstract
In 1965, Frederick Duhl began a sexual relationship with his patient, poet Anne Sexton, whose previous psychiatrist, Martin Orne, had moved from Boston to Philadelphia. Little is known about this relationship, perhaps because Sexton was persuaded by health professionals, including her previous psychiatrist, not to expose Dr. Duhl. These professionals closed ranks behind Duhl, covering up the ethical misconduct, which may have contributed to Anne Sexton’s eventual suicide in 1974. Apart from documented reports elicited by her biographer, Diane Middlebrook, information about Duhl’s sexual misconduct is limited to his personal correspondence with Sexton, which Sexton preserved. The exchange of letters between them, including examples of Duhl’s amateur poetry, provides an unusual opportunity to investigate the dynamics of sexual boundary violations in psychotherapy. Sexton represents her bewildered feelings poignantly in letters to Duhl, whereas Duhl’s stilted efforts to respond to her emotional needs reveal a disturbing pattern of envious appropriation.
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Notes on contributors
Charles Levin
Charles Levin, Ph.D., is currently Director of the Canadian Institute of Psychoanalysis and Editor-in-Chief, Canadian Journal of Psychoanalysis/Revue canadienne de psychanalyse. He has produced a number of articles and books, including the edited volume, Social Aspects of Sexual Boundary Trouble in Psychoanalysis (forthcoming from Routledge).
Dawn Skorczewski
Dawn Skorczewski, Ph.D., is Research Professor of English at Brandeis University and Clue+ Fellow at VU Amsterdam. Her books and articles explore intersections of pedagogy, poetry, psychoanalysis, and trauma. Her books include Teaching Writing One Moment at a Time: Disruption and Repair in the Classroom (2005), An Accident of Hope: The Therapy Tapes of Anne Sexton (2012), and Pursuing Happiness (2016, 2019). [email protected]