Partner James Inscoe Sullivan
Queer Places:
Cornell University (Ivy League), 410 Thurston Ave, Ithaca, NY 14850
Herbert
"Harry" Stack Sullivan (February 21, 1892, Norwich, New York – January 14, 1949,
Paris, France) was an American Neo-Freudian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who held that the
personality lives in, and has his or her being in, a complex of
interpersonal relations.[1]
Having studied therapists Sigmund Freud, Adolf Meyer, and William Alanson White, he devoted
years of clinical and research work to helping people with psychotic
illness.[2]
William Alexander
Percy had three prominent gay friends, the art historian
Gerstle Mack, who popularized Picasso
in America; Harry Stack Sullivan,
a prominent psychiatrist; and Huger Jervey,
professor of international law at Columbia. Indeed, with Jervey, William
Alexander Percy bought Brinkwood, a summer house in Mount Eagle,
Tennessee, near Sewanee.
Sullivan was a child of Irish immigrants and grew up in the then
anti-Roman Catholic town of Norwich, New York,
resulting in a social isolation which may have inspired his later
interest in psychiatry. He attended the Smyrna Union School, then spent
two years at Cornell University from 1909,[3]
receiving his medical degree in Chicago College of Medicine and Surgery
in 1917.
Along with Clara Thompson, Karen
Horney, Erich Fromm, Otto Allen Will, Jr., Erik H.
Erikson, and Frieda Fromm-Reichmann, Sullivan laid the groundwork
for understanding the individual based on the network of relationships
in which he or she is enmeshed. He developed a theory of psychiatry
based on interpersonal relationships[4] where
cultural forces are largely responsible for mental illnesses. In his words, one must pay attention to
the "interactional", not the "intrapsychic". This search for
satisfaction via personal involvement with others led Sullivan to
characterize loneliness as the most painful of human experiences. He
also extended the Freudian psychoanalysis to the treatment of patients
with severe mental disorders, particularly schizophrenia.
Besides making the first mention of the significant other in
psychological literature, Sullivan developed the Self System, a
configuration of the ''personality traits'' developed in childhood and
reinforced by positive affirmation and the ''security operations''
developed in childhood to avoid anxiety and threats to self-esteem.
Sullivan further defined the Self System as a steering mechanism toward
a series of I-You interlocking behaviors; that is, what an
individual does is meant to elicit a particular reaction.
Sullivan called these behaviors Parataxical Integrations, and he
noted that such action-reaction combinations can become rigid and
dominate an adult's thinking pattern, limiting its actions and reactions
toward the world as the adult sees it and not as it really is. The
resulting inaccuracies in judgment Sullivan termed parataxic
distortion, when other persons are perceived or evaluated based on the
patterns of previous experience, similar to Freud's notion of
transference. Sullivan also introduced the concept of "prototaxic
communication" as a more primitive, needy, infantile form of psychic
interchange and of "syntactic communication" as a mature style of
emotional interaction.
Sullivan's work on interpersonal
relationships became the foundation of interpersonal psychoanalysis,
a school of psychoanalytic theory and treatment that stresses the
detailed exploration of the nuances of patients' patterns of interacting
with others.
Sullivan was the first to coin the term "problems in
living" to describe the difficulties with self and others experienced by
those with so-called mental illnesses. This phrase was later picked up
and popularized by Thomas Szasz, whose work was a foundational
resource for the antipsychiatry movement. "Problems in living" went
on to become the movement's preferred way to refer to the manifestations
of mental disturbances.
In 1927, he reviewed the controversial
anonymously published ''The Invert and his Social Adjustment'' and in
1929 called it "a remarkable document by a homosexual man of refinement;
intended primarily as a guide to the unfortunate sufferers of sexual
inversion, and much less open to criticism than anything else of the
kind so far published."[5]
He was one of
the founders of the William Alanson White Institute, considered by
many to be the world's leading independent psychoanalytic institute, and
of the journal ''Psychiatry'' in 1937. He headed the Washington (DC)
School of Psychiatry from 1936 to 1947.
In 1940, he and colleague
Winfred Overholser, serving on the American Psychiatric Society's committee on Military
Mobilization, formulated guidelines for the psychological screening of
inductees to the United States military. He believed, writes one
historian, "that sexuality played a minimal role in causing mental
disorders and that adult homosexuals should be accepted and left alone."
Despite his best efforts, others included homosexuality as a
disqualification for military service.[6]
Beginning on December 5, 1940, Sullivan served as psychiatric
adviser to Selective Service Director Clarence A. Dykstra, but
resigned in November 1941 after Gen. Lewis B. Hersey, who was hostile to
psychiatry, became Director.
Beginning in 1927, Sullivan had a
22-year relationship with James Inscoe Sullivan, known as "Jimmie", 20
years his junior.
Although some
contemporaries and historians have regarded Inscoe as an unofficially
adopted son, and Sullivan as closeted, one should remember that to be
open about it would have made his professional interest in the area and
further research very difficult. His colleague Helen Swick Perry's
biography of Sullivan mentions the relationship and it is clear his
close friends were well aware they were partners.
Although Sullivan published little in his lifetime, he influenced
generations of mental health professionals, especially through his
lectures at Chestnut Lodge in Washington, DC. Leston Havens
called him the most important underground influence in American
psychoanalysis. His ideas were collected and published posthumously,
edited by Helen Swick Perry, who also published a detailed biography in
1982 (Perry, 1982, Psychiatrist of America).
The following works
are in Special Collections (MSA SC 5547) at the Maryland State Archives
in Annapolis: Conceptions of Modern Psychiatry, Soundscriber
Transcriptions (Feb. 1945-May 1945); Lectures 1-97 (begins Oct. 2,
1942); Georgetown University Medical School Lectures (1939); Personal
Psychopathology (1929–1933); The Psychiatry of Character and its
Deviations-undated notes.
After Sullivan's death, Saul B. Newton and his
wife Dr. Jane Pearce (a psychiatrist who studied with Sullivan in the
late 1940s) established the Sullivan Institute for Research in
Psychoanalysis in New York City.
My published books: