Ph.D. 1967, University of Maryland
Ph.D. 1967, University of Maryland
Teaching Faculty & Clinical Consultant | Interpersonal Track
Hirsch, I. (1983). Analytic Intimacy and the Restoration of Nurturance. Am. J. Psychoanal., 43:325-343.
Hirsch, I. (1984). Toward a More Subjective View of Analyzability. Am. J. Psychoanal., 44:169-182.
Hirsch, I. (1985). The Rediscovery of the Advantages of the Participant-Observation Model. Psychoanal. Contemp. Thought, 8:441-459.
Hirsch, I. (1986). Sexual Disorders: A Perspective. Am. J. Psychoanal., 46:239-248.
Hirsch, I. (1987). Varying Modes of Analytic Participation. J. Amer. Acad. Psychoanal., 15:205-222.
Hirsch, I., Kessel, P. (1988). Reflections on mature love and countertransference. Free Associations, 1:60-83.
Hirsch, I. (1990). Countertransference and Participant Observation. Am. J. Psychoanal., 50:275-284.
Hirsch, I. (1992). An Interpersonal Perspective: The Analyst's Unwitting Participation in the Patient's Change. Psychoanal. Psychol., 9:299-312.
Hirsch, I. (1992). Extending Sullivan's Interpersonalism. Contemp. Psychoanal., 28:732-747.
Hirsch, I. (1992). The Value of Naive Directness in Countertransference Work: Commentary on Mark Blechner's “Working in the Countertransference”. Psychoanal. Dial., 2:191-203.
Hirsch, I. (1993). Countertransference Enactments and Some Issues Related to External Factors in the Analyst's Life. Psychoanal. Dial., 3:343-366.
Hirsch, I. (1994). Countertransference Love and Theoretical Model. Psychoanal. Dial., 4:171-192.
Hirsch, I. (1994). Dissociation and the Interpersonal Self. Contemp. Psychoanal., 30:777-799.
Hirsch, I. (1995). Changing Conceptions Of Unconscious. Contemp. Psychoanal., 31:263.
Hirsch, I. (1997). Analytic intimacy, analysability and the vulnerable analyst. Free Associations, 7:250-259.
Hirsch, I. (1997). Enactments: Convergence And Divergence. Contemp. Psychoanal., 33:285-293.
Hirsch, I. (1997). On Men's Preference for Men. Gender and Psychoanalysis, 2:469-486.
Hirsch, I. (1997). The Widening of the Concept of Dissociation. J. Amer. Acad. Psychoanal., 25:603-615.
Hirsch, I. (1998). The Concept of Enactment and Theoretical Convergence. Psychoanal Q., 67:78-101.
Hirsch, I. (1999). From Helplessness to Betrayal to the Illusion of Strength. Gender and Psychoanalysis, 4:291-306.
Hirsch, I. (1999). Men's Love for Men: Contrasting Classical American Film With The Crying Game. J. Amer. Acad. Psychoanal., 27:151-166.
Hirsch, I. (2002). Beyond Interpretation: Analytic Interaction in the Interpersonal Tradition. Contemp. Psychoanal., 38:573-587.
Hirsch, I. (2002). Interpersonal Psychoanalysis' Radical Façade. J. Amer. Acad. Psychoanal., 30:595-603.
Hirsch, I. (2003). Analysts' Observing-Participation with Theory. Psychoanal Q., 72:217-240.
Hirsch, I. (2003). Psychoanalytic Theory as a Form of Countertransference. J. Amer. Psychoanal. Assn., 51S:181-201.
Hirsch, I. (2003). Reflections on Clinical Issues in the Context of the National Truama of September 11. Contemp. Psychoanal., 39:665-681.
Hirsch, I. (2006). The Interpersonal Roots of Relational Thinking. Contemp. Psychoanal., 42:551-556.
Hirsch, I. (2007). Imperfect Love, Imperfect Lives: Making Love, Making Sex, Making Moral Judgments. Studies in Gender and Sexuality, 8:355-371.
Hirsch, I. (2008). Coasting in the Countertransference: Conflicts of Self-Interest between Analyst and Patient. Routledge: New York.
Hirsch, I. (2009). On Idealism and Soberness: Founding and Maintaining a Psychoanalytic Institute. Contemp. Psychoanal., 45:330-344.
Hirsch, I. (2011). Narcissism, Mania and Analysts' Envy. Am. J. Psychoanal., 71:363-369.
Hirsch, I. (2011). On Some Contributions of the Interpersonal Psychoanalytic Tradition to 21st-Century Psychoanalysis. Contemp. Psychoanal., 47:561-570.