Volume 1, 1911-1938, with an Introduction by Kenneth Robinson
Volume 2, 1939-1945, with an Introduction by Christopher Reeves
Volume 3, 1946-1951, with an Introduction by Vincenzo Bonaminio and
Paolo Fabozzi
Volume 4, 1952-1955, with an Introduction by Dominique Scarfone
Volume 5, 1955-1959, with an Introduction by Jennifer Johns and
Marcus Johns
Volume 6, 1960-1963, with an Introduction by Angela Joyce
Volume 7, 1964-1966, with an Introduction by Anna Ferruta
Volume 8, 1967-1968, with an Introduction by Ann Horne
Volume 9, 1969-1971, with an Introduction by Arne Jemstedt
Volume 10, Therapeutic Consultations in Child Psychiatry, with an
Introduction by Marco Armellini
Volume 11, Human Nature and The Piggle, with an Introduction by
Steven Groarke
Volume 12, Appendices and Bibliographies, with an Introduction by
Robert Adès
Donald Woods Winnicott (1896-1971) was one of Britain's foremost
pediatricians and psychoanalysts. He studied at the Leys School and
at Jesus College, both in Cambridge, before training as a physician
at St. Bartholomew's Hospital in London. He worked at Queen's
Hospital and Paddington Green Children's Hospital and in private
practice with adults and children from the 1930s until his death.
During the Second World War, he made BBC broadcasts to
parents and worked with his second wife, Clare, in the Oxfordshire
Evacuation Scheme. After the war, they contributed to the
government planning of Children's Services.
Winnicott was a child and adult analyst and a training analyst for
the British Psychoanalytical Society and its President from 1956 to
1959 and from 1965 to 1968. He was President of the Paediatric
Section of the Royal Society of Medicine (1952) and of the
Association for Child Psychology and Psychiatry. Winnicott was a
clinician committed to the dissemination of psychoanalytic ideas to
wider global audiences, and he addressed a large variety of groups
of professionals in his many talks,
lectures, and publications.
Lesley Caldwell is a member of the British Psychoanalytic
Association in private practice in London. She is an Honorary
Professor in the Psychoanalysis Unit and Honorary Senior Research
Associate in the Italian Department at University College, London.
As Chair of the Squiggle Foundation (2000-2003) and editor of the
Winnicott Studies Monograph Series (2000-2008), she published four
edited collections on D. W. Winnicott. She has been an editor for
the Winnicott Trust since 2002
and was the Chair of Trustees from 2008-2012. With Angela Joyce,
she published Reading Winnicott (2011). She has a continuing
interest in psychoanalysis and the arts and has also written on
film and the city of Rome.
Helen Taylor Robinson is a Fellow of the Institute of
Psychoanalysis, London, and was a clinical psychoanalyst with
adults and children until her retirement. She was an Editor and
Trustee of the Winnicott Trust for 17 years and co-edited Thinking
about Children with Jennifer Johns and Ray Shepherd. Her special
interest is in the relationship of psychoanalysis to the arts,
literature, and cinema. She has been Honorary Senior Lecturer at
the Psychoanalysis Unit of
University College, London. She has contributed to books and
journals in the field of psychoanalysis and to the European
Psychoanalysis and Film Festival.
Robert Adès is Honorary Research Fellow at the Psychoanalysis Unit,
University College London. He holds an MA (Hons) in Philosophy from
Edinburgh University and an MSc in Psychoanalytic Studies from
University College London. Before joining The Collected Works, he
was Honorary Psychotherapist at the Maudsley Hospital and at
Parkside Clinic, London.
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