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  1. Katie Gentile, Ph.D. is Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies and Director of the Gender Studies Program at John Jay College of Criminal Justice (City University of New York). She is the author of Creating bodies: Eating disorders as self-destructive survival and The Business of being made: The temporalities of reproductive technologies, in ...

  2. Psychoanalysis, trauma, and theories of temporalities and transgenerational trauma. She has been interviewed for stories in the New York Times, Marie Claire, Cosmopolitan, and other publications and on public radio about sexual violence, institutional betrayal, restorative justice, and sexual boundary violations, and fetal personhood.

  3. Katie GENTILE | Professor and Gender Studies Director | Doctor of Philosophy | City University of New York - John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York | John Jay CUNY | Department of...

  4. 26 de feb. de 2020 · Katie Gentile, Ph.D. is Professor of Gender Studies in the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. She is the author of Creating bodies: Eating disorders as self-destructive survival (Routledge) and The Business of being made: The temporalities of reproductive technologies, in psychoanalysis ...

  5. Katie Gentile, Ph.D., NYS Psychology License Professor, Gender Studies and Interdisciplinary Studies John Jay College of Criminal Justice 524 W. 59th Street, NY, NY 10019 (212) 237-8110 kgentile@jjay.cuny.edu Education 2003 Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy

  6. About. Katie Gentile is editor of the Routledge book series Genders & Sexualities in Minds & Cultures, co-editor of the journal Studies in Gender and Sexuality and on the editorial board of...

  7. 6 de abr. de 2021 · In my response to Katie Gentiles “Kittens in the Clinical Space,” (this issue) I address the early twenty-first century critical theory and the works of indigenous knowledge that Gentile references in the challenge she puts to psychoanalysts to think beyond human privilege, its relationship to racio-specieism, colonialism, and settler-colonialism.