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Evening Seminar

Thursday, 17th July 2025 @ 7.00pm

David Morgan - Heroic Denial: Trauma, Forensic Psychotherapy, and the Analyst’s Capacity to Be and Think

 

“If I tell you everything I will have to kill you.”

One of my first Forensic patients 

Forensic psychotherapy operates at the frontiers of what the mind can bear. To sit with those who have enacted extreme violence, sexual homicide, sadistic abuse, cannibalism is to sit with the disintegration not only of the patient’s mind, often the death, mutilation of the other, but with the profound risk of disintegration in oneself, in the face of such experience. Or worse the failure to breakdown in the face of such material. In such contexts, the therapist is asked not simply to think about trauma, but to be in relation to it: to sustain presence in the face of horror, without resort to omnipotent defences or collapse into identification.

Yet within forensic settings, where the ordinary safeguards of human relatedness have already been shattered, there often emerges a distinctive form of psychic defence among clinicians, which I want to address both in myself and colleagues, what might be called heroic denial. This is a rather manic refusal to acknowledge the impact of trauma on the therapist’s own mind, an unconscious idealisation of our capacity to absorb violence without psychic injury. It can masquerade as professional competence, or even as moral virtue, “I can bear it; others cannot.” This is often a thin membrane, easily ruptured by the force of what is encountered or defended against at all costs. 

I want to explore what this ability is and how much it reflects something in these patients' presentations that manifests itself in this way. 

About The Speaker

David Morgan is a British psychoanalyst and consultant psychotherapist who has an interest in integrating psychoanalytic theory with social and political analysis. With over 25 years of experience at the Portman Clinic and the Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust in London, he has also maintained a private practice.

He co-edited with Stan Ryszynszki Lectures on Violence, Perversion and DelinquencyHis academic pursuits extend to exploring the unconscious dimensions of social and political life, evident in his edited works The Unconscious in Social and Political Life and A Deeper Cut: Further Explorations of the Unconscious in Social and Political Life.   

 

Morgan actively engages with the public through various media. He hosted the radio show Frontier Psychoanalyst. He also chairs the “Political Minds” at the BPAs and “Poetic Minds” at the BPA seminar series, fostering dialogue on the intersection of psychoanalysis and politics.  


Morgan is a training analyst and supervisor BPA, BPF and Fellow of the British Psychoanalytical Society and the British Psychoanalytic Association.  

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