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Harry Stack Sullivan

Harry Stack Sullivan was an American psychiatrist who developed interpersonal theory. Some key aspects of his theory include: 1. Personality develops through interpersonal relationships, and our most basic need is to receive care from at least one other person. 2. Anxiety is a disruptive force that develops from interactions with caregivers and prevents healthy relationships. 3. Behavior is aimed at satisfying needs and reducing anxiety, and recurring patterns of behavior called "dynamisms" are organized from these energy transformations between people. Common dynamisms include malevolence, lust, and conjunctiveness.

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
970 views4 pages

Harry Stack Sullivan

Harry Stack Sullivan was an American psychiatrist who developed interpersonal theory. Some key aspects of his theory include: 1. Personality develops through interpersonal relationships, and our most basic need is to receive care from at least one other person. 2. Anxiety is a disruptive force that develops from interactions with caregivers and prevents healthy relationships. 3. Behavior is aimed at satisfying needs and reducing anxiety, and recurring patterns of behavior called "dynamisms" are organized from these energy transformations between people. Common dynamisms include malevolence, lust, and conjunctiveness.

Uploaded by

Michal Gail
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Harry Stack Sullivan’s (1892 – 1949) Interpersonal Theory - Most basic interpersonal

need
 Brief Information - Requires action from at least
Name: Harry Stack Sullivan 2 people
Place of birth: Norwich, New York - Infant: to receive
Date of birth: February 21, 1892 - Mothering one: to give
Religion: Catholic ii. Physiological Needs (e.g. oxygen,
Occupation: American Psychiatrist food, etc.)
Mother’s name: Ella Stack Sullivan b) Zonal Needs (oral, genital, manual)
Father’s name: Timothy Sullivan
Date of Death: January 14, 1949 2. Anxiety
Cause of death: heart attack/cerebral hemorrhage - Disjunctive, vague and calls forth no consistent
actions for its relief
 Some Events - Chief disruptive force blocking the
 His mother protected him after the death of two development of healthy interpersonal relations
other sons. - Transferred from the mothering one to the
 His father was a shy and withdrawn farm infant through empathy
laborer/factory worker who did not speak to him - Signs of anxiety may cause the mother to
until his mother died and he became a physician. misunderstand it as needs
 On Harry’s 3rd birthday, her mother mysteriously - Prevent people from learning from their
went missing from home. mistakes
 Sullivan had a lonely and isolated childhood. - Keeps people pursuing childish wish for
 At 8 ½ years old, he formed a close friendship to a security
13-year-old boy named Clarence Bellinger.
 He graduated high school at age 16. B. Energy Transformations
 Undergraduate: Cornell University - Tensions that are transformed into overt or covert
actions
 Medicine Degree: Chicago College of Medicine and
- Behaviors that are aimed at satisfying needs and
Surgery
reducing anxiety
 Medical officer during and after World War I.
 St. Elizabeth Hospital: worked with a large number
C. Dynamisms
of patients with schizophrenia
- Key concept in Sullivan’s overall personality theory
 Sheppard and Enoch Pratt Hospital: He was called
- Typical behavior patterns that are organized from
the “clinical wizard”
energy transformations
 James Inscoe: remained with Sullivan for 22 years; - Smallest unity of study in interpersonal
his last name was changed to Sullivan and was relationships
treated like his own son. - Pattern of behavior that endures and recurs, as
such it may be equated to habit
 Basic Tenet - 2 classes:
It emphasized the importance of interpersonal  Related to the body (e.g. mouth, anus, genitals)
relations; Personality is shaped almost entirely by
 Related to tensions (disjunctive, isolating,
the relationships we have with other people.
conjunctive)
 Sullivan’s Theory of Personality 1. Malevolence
> Sullivan saw personality as an energy system < - Disjunctive dynamism of evil and hatred
A. Tensions - Feeling of living among one’s enemies
- Potential for action - Take the form of timidity,
- May or may not be experienced in awareness mischievousness, cruelty of other kinds of
asocial/antisocial behavior
1. Needs - Trust is affected in latter stages of not
- Tensions brought on by biological imbalance resolved
both inside and outside the organism - “Once upon a time everything was lovely,
- Episodic in nature: when satisfied, it will but that was before I had to deal with
temporarily lose its power then recur after people”
some time 2. Lust
a) General Needs - Isolating tendency
i. Interpersonal Needs - Immediate goal: genital sexual activity
 Tenderness
- Requiring no other person for its - Consensually validated conceptions that are
satisfaction widely accepted by members of society handed
- Manifests itself as autoerotic behavior down from generation to generation
even when another person is the object of
it 1. Good-mother; bad-mother personifications
- Powerful during adolescence a) Good-mother
- Reduction of self-esteem - Tender and cooperative behaviors of the
- Hinders intimate relationships mothering one
3. Conjunctive b) Bad-mother
- Positive and conjunctive dynamism - Infant’s personification of not being fed
- Grows out of the earlier need for - Nipple that does not satisfy hunger of the
tenderness infant
- Involves a close relationship between two c) Overprotective mother
people who are more or less of equal - Stems from the mother’s anxiety
status 2. Me personifications
- Must not be confused with sexual interest a) Bad-me personification
- Integrating dynamism that tends to draw - Punishment and disapproval
out loving reactions from the other person - Negative aspects of the self
- Rewarding experience that most health - Hidden from others and possibly from the
people desire self
b) Good-me personification
Self-System - Reward and approval
- Most complex and inclusive of all - Mother’s expression and approval
dynamisms - Everything that we like about ourselves
- Consistent pattern of behaviors that c) Not-me personification
maintains people’s interpersonal security - Caused by sudden severe anxiety
by protecting them from anxiety - So anxiety-provoking, we cannot even
- Develops at about 12 – 18 months of age consider them to be a part of us
- (+): serves as a signal, alerting people to - Adults: dreams, schizophrenic episodes
increasing anxiety and giving them an and other dissociative reactions
opportunity to protect themselves Personified self – single, integrated self-image
- (-): resistant to change and prevent people 3. Eidetic personifications
from profiting from anxiety-filled - Unrealistic traits or imaginary friends that
experiences many children invent in order to protect their
- People form a consistent image of self-esteem
themselves - Adults: see fictional traits in others
 Security Operations - Hinder communication and prevent people
- To reduce feelings of insecurity or from functioning on the same level of cognition
anxiety that result from endangered
self-esteem E. Levels of Cognition
a) Dissociation 1. Prototaxic level
- Impulses, desires and needs that - Impossible to communicate
a person refuses to allow into - Earliest and most primitive experience of an
awareness infant
b) Selective Inattention - Beyond conscious recall
- Control of focal awareness and - “stream of consciousness”
refusal to see those things that 2. Parataxic level
we do not wish to see - Usually results when a person assumes a
cause-and-effect relationship between two
D. Personifications events that occur coincidentally
- Images that one has of himself or of another - Prelogical and personal experiences that are
- Complex web of feelings, attitudes and conceptions communicated in distorted form
that grows out of experiences with need 3. Syntaxic level
satisfaction and anxiety - Meaningful interpersonal communication
- May be relatively accurate or distorted depending - Consensually validated experiences and can be
on our needs and anxieties symbolically communicated
 Stereotypes - Formal language
- Personifications shared by a number of people
 Stages of Development
STAGE AGE SIGNIFICANT INTERPERSONAL PROCESS IMPORTANT LEARNINGS
OTHERS
Infancy 0–2 Mothering one Tenderness Good/Bad
Childhood 2–6 Parents Imaginary playmates Synataxic language
Juvenile Era 6–8½ Playmates of equal Living with peers Competition, compromise,
status cooperation
Preadolescence 8 ½ – 13 Single chum Intimacy Affection and respect from peers
Early Adolescence 13 – 15 Several chums Intimacy and lust toward Balance of lust, intimacy and
different persons security operations
Late Adolescence 15 – Lover Fusion of intimacy and lust Discovery of self and world

1. Infancy  Compromise – giving in, when overdone, will


- Birth until when the child develops handicap the child in the socialization process
articulate/syntaxic speech  Cooperation – critical step to becoming
- First anxiety: nursing situation and the oral zone socialized
- Oral zone: primary zone of interaction between the - Orientation toward living: readies a person for
baby and its environment deeper interpersonal relationships to follow
- Apathy and somnolent detachment: built-in
protections to keep the baby from dying 4. Preadolescence
- Autistic language: private language that makes no - Personality transformation because of taking interst
sense to other people in another person
2. Childhood - “genesis of the capacity to love”
- Period of acculturation (how to act) - Intimacy and love: essence of friendship
- Personifications of the mother are fused into one as - Most untroubled and carefree time of life
well as me-personifications (single self-dynamism) - Characterized with unselfish love not yet
- Labelling good or bad is now because of social or contaminated by lust
moral value and not anymore based on the anxiety - Most crucial stage of development
of the child - Chums: able to express self without fear of
- Mother-child relationship becomes personal humiliation
- 2 important processes: - Intimacy: relationship between two partners
a) Dramatizations – attempts to act like authority consensually validating one another’s personal
figures worth
b) Preoccupations – remain occupied with an - Love: exists when the satisfaction/security of
activity that has earlier proved useful or another person becomes a significant to one as in
rewarding one’s own satisfaction/security
 Imaginary friends 5. Early Adolescence
- Eidetic friend - Marked by the eruption of genital interest and the
- Enables children to have a safe, secure advent of lustful relationships
relationship that produces little anxiety - Conflict of intimacy, lust and security operations
- Sign of a positive event that helps children  Lust vs security operations: genital activity =
become ready for intimacy with real friends anxiety, guilt and embarrassment
during the preadolescence stage  Intimacy vs security operations: self-doubt,
 During preschool years: uncertainty and ridicule (low self-esteem, high
- Malevolent attitude anxiety)
- Evolved self-dynamism to handle anxiety  Intimacy vs lust: powerful genital tensions seek
better]the self-system introduces much outlet without regard for intimacy needs
stability that it makes future changes very - Lust dynamism: biological
difficult - Turning point in personality development
3. Juvenile Era 6. Late Adolescence
- Playmates are of equal status - Period of self-discovery
- Able to make discriminations - People of the other gender are viewed as people
- Learnings: who are capable of being loved nonselfishly
 Competition – to be successful - Includes a growing syntaxic mode
(overemphasized) - Begin exchanging ideas with others and having their
opinions and beliefs either validated or repudiated
- Only the mature person has the capacity to love;  Critique
others merely go through the motions of being “in Strengths:
love” in order to maintain security - Asserted the importance of society and interaction
7. Adulthood on personality
- A period when people can establish a love - Emphasized the concept of the self
relationship with at least one significant person - Focused on the interpersonal rather than
- Developed intimacy: principal source of satisfaction psychosexual
in life
- Beyond the scope of interpersonal psychiatry Weaknesses:
- Characteristics of people in this stage: - Intense concern for working for a world free of
 Operate predominantly on the syntaxic level tensions and conflicts
 Find life interesting and exciting - Concept of self grows out of the “reflected
appraisal” of others
 Psychiatric interview - Merely elaborated Freud’s ego and defenses
 Psychiatry
- The study of processes involve or go on between  References:
people Morgan, J.H. (2014). The Interpersonal Psychotherapy of
- The field of interpersonal relations, under any and Harry Stack Sullivan: Remembering the Legacy. J Psychol
all circumstances in which relations exist Psychother. 4(6): 162. DOI: 10.4172/2161-0487.1000162
 Interview – interpersonal, face-to-face situation that Feist, J. & Feist, G.J. (2008). Theories of Personality (7th ed.).
takes place between patient and therapist pp. 212-241. USA: McGraw-Hill Higher Education.
 Interviewer’s role Tria, G.E. & Limpingco, D.A. (2016). Personality (4th ed.). pp.
- Participant observer 77-83. Quezon City, PH: Pantas Publishing & Printing
- Helps patients give up some security in dealing with Inc.
other people and to realize that they can achieve
mental health only through consensually validated
personal relations
- Communicate on the syntaxic level to reduce
anxiety
- Avoid getting involved with patients
- Convince patients of expert abilities

 Stages of interview
1. Formal Inception
- Vocal communication between patient and
therapist
- Promotes confidence in the patient by
demonstrating interpersonal skills
- Patient express reasons for seeking therapy
2. Period of Reconnaissance
- Finding out who the patient is
- General personal and social history is
established
- Open-ended questions are asked to invite the
patient to feel free to express the patient’s
emotional state at the time
3. Detailed Inquiry
- Attempt to know which among the formulated
hypotheses during the first two stages is more
substantial
4. Termination Stage
- Interviewer makes an assessment of what
he/she learned and prescribes a course for the
patient to follow including its effects
- Gives he client “homework”

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