Login
Rodman, F. (1987). The Spontaneous Gesture: Selected Letters of D. W. Winnicott. Cambridge, MA / London: Harvard Univ. Press.

Welcome to PEP Web!

Viewing the full text of this document requires a subscription to PEP Web.

If you are coming in from a university from a registered IP address or secure referral page you should not need to log in. Contact your university librarian in the event of problems.

If you have a personal subscription on your own account or through a Society or Institute please put your username and password in the box below. Any difficulties should be reported to your group administrator.

Username:
Password:

Can't remember your username and/or password? If you have forgotten your username and/or password please click here and log in to the PaDS database. Once there you need to fill in your email address (this must be the email address that PEP has on record for you) and click "Send." Your username and password will be sent to this email address within a few minutes. If this does not work for you please contact your group organizer.

Athens user? Login here.

Not already a subscriber? Order a subscription today.

Rodman, F. (1987). The Spontaneous Gesture. , 1-203. Cambridge, MA / London: Harvard Univ. Press.

The Spontaneous Gesture: Selected Letters of D. W. Winnicott

Edited by:
F. Robert Rodman

Contents

Preface ix
Acknowledgements xi
Introduction xiii
Letters 1-126
Winnicott's Correspondence 199
Index 205 (Not available in PEP Archive 1)

Preface

I had no way of knowing that publication of the letters of D. W. Winnicott was being planned when, in 1979, I wrote to Dr. Winnicott's widow, Mrs. Clare Winnicott, and asked whether I might edit them. I had just reread his response to a paper I had sent him in 1969. In its length and openness, his letter was more than a reply; it was a gift. It seemed likely that many other correspondents had been so favored. Winnicott's work, and, I suppose, Winnicott himself, had always seemed highly accessible to me, from my first reading of him as a medical student. And so the act of mailing him a paper without asking in advance whether he would mind was as typical of how I felt about him as was the letter I sent ten years later to Mrs. Winnicott, something out of the blue that might be acceptable anyway. It was.

I went to her home in Lower Belgrave Street in May of 1980 to meet with her and with Ray Shepherd, a psychoanalyst and a member of the Winnicott Publications Committee, and Peter Tizard, Winnicott's old friend and distinguished fellow pediatrician. After dinner, Mrs. Winnicott showed me to the comfortable basement room where the letters were kept. They had been organized in a series of ring binders from 1958 onward, one per year, with all the correspondence alphabetized. There were also several boxes full of unsorted letters and miscellaneous documents. I scanned this material and became convinced that a great deal of it would be of interest to a wide readership of psychoanalysts and others of diverse background.

The following year I arranged to have the material copied. But it was not until 1984 that I could continue the necessary work, and by then Mrs. Winnicott had succumbed to the illness that she had

- ix -

[This is a summary or excerpt from the full text of the book or article. The full text of the document is available to subscribers.]

Copyright © 2013, Psychoanalytic Electronic Publishing. Help | About | Download PEP Bibliography | Report a Problem

WARNING! This text is printed for the personal use of the subscriber to PEP Web and is copyright to the Journal in which it originally appeared. It is illegal to copy, distribute or circulate it in any form whatsoever.