My movie report on America: The therapeutic outlook "American I" is a fictitious film based on the fact that Edward James Ormos starred and directed. "American Me" published at the National Theater in 1992 depicts the life of Rudolf Cardena, the ranking of Carol (gang member) of the prison group La Eme (also known as the Mexican mafia). For any human service practitioner engaged in the assessment of accuracy and treatment effectiveness, treatment is close to the salience and ubiquity of a group of members, including their charm and improvement, that it will be a challenging task there is.
In 1971, Heinzkoff's "Self-Psychology of Self" opened up a new theoretical perspective on American psychoanalysis. Shortly afterwards, efforts to develop Margaret Mahler were endorsed by several people, an increasingly diversified treatment of psychoanalysis in the United States began. Today, self-psychology, which dominated America's psychoanalytic thinking, has changed dramatically over the years, and is currently being strongly influenced by development relationships. The various treatment schools currently operated in the United States include the UK object relational list, "Modern Freud", Klein and Bion's theory, self psychology, Lacane and others. In fact, the US psychoanalysis organization can use a kaleidoscope-like approach. Many psychoanalysts believe that human experience can best be explained by integrating these ideas.
Psychoanalysis was established in the United States between World War I and the Second World War when Americans traveled through Europe to take advantage of psychoanalytical training opportunities in Europe. The only major therapeutic outlook transplanted to the United States is self-psychology focused on Sigmund Freud's Self and Freedom (1923) and Anxiety (1936), then Anna Freud's Self and Mechanism Defense is. (1936) and Heinz Hartman's psychoanalysis and adaptation questions (1939). Until the 1970s, this psychoanalytic view dominated the United States for about 50 years. At the same time, various theoretical methods are developed in Europe.
Today, most psychologists believe that even if Freud is made it is rarely made. All theoretical aspects related to the viewpoint of Sigmund Freud are called psychodynamic theory and hold the term psychoanalytic for treatment developed by Freud. Freud simply called his theory and his treatment psychoanalysis. This seems to be because Freud was originally a therapist and it was only to explain why some methods were effective and others were not used to develop his theory . This may also be related to the fact that Freud's theory of character is the first, so he does not have to distinguish his view from other people's work. Whatever the reason, for our purposes we use the term psychoanalysis to refer to the treatment developed by Freud. It is quite different from the technique already used by Brewer and Charcot.