John Michael Kerr

john kerr
John M. Kerr, 66, of Taylor Street, Portland died Monday, July 18, 2016, at Maine Medical Center. John Kerr was born in Washington, DC on January 31, 1950. He was the son of the New York Times Drama Critic, Walter Kerr, and the playwright and humorist, Jean (Collins) Kerr. He graduated from Portsmouth Abbey School in Portsmouth, Rhode Island in 1967, received a Bachelor of Science degree in political science from Harvard University in 1971, and pursued his Doctorate Degree in psychology from New York University. Trained as a clinical psychologist at NYU, Mr. Kerr worked as a staff psychologist in diverse inpatient and outpatient settings. In addition, he was for many years the senior editor at The Analytic Press, a publisher of books for psychoanalysts and other mental health professionals. In addition to writing articles for various psychoanalytic journals, John Kerr was the co-editor ofFreud and the History of Psychoanalysis and of Attachment Theory: Social, Developmental, and Clinical Perspectives.He was formerly a research associate at the Institute for the History of Psychiatry at N.Y.-Cornell Weill Medical Center and an Erikson Scholar at Austen Riggs Center. He was also a member of the Rapaport-Klein Discussion Group, Stockbridge, Massachusetts, a visiting teacher at the Harvard Medical School, and an honorary member of the William Alanson White Society of New York. Among the authors he has worked with as an editor are Philip Bromberg, Beatrice Beebe, Frank Lachmann, Joseph Lichtenberg, James Fosshage, Bernard Brandchaft, Laura Tessman, James Herzog, Jack Drescher, Susan Coates, Paul Lippmann, and Arnold Richards. Mr. Kerr is perhaps most well known as the author of A Most Dangerous Method: The Story of Jung, Freud, Sabina Spielrein which was published by Knopf in 1993. A detailed historical study of the psychoanalytic movement and the codification of psychoanalytic theory, it read like an unfolding mystery and in 2011 was made into a movie directed by David Cronenberg and starring Keira Knightley, Viggo Mortensen and Michael Fassbender. A native New Yorker, Mr. Kerr moved to Portland, Maine 18 years ago and embraced it as his new home. In addition to working as a private editor, he began writing a play about the American psychiatrist, Harry Stack Sullivan and enjoyed performing in a number of local theatrical productions. Mr. Kerr is survived by a step daughter, Victoria Aristizabal and her companion William Duncanson, of Portland; his sister, Kitty Kerr Mahin and husband Tom, of Arlington, Massachusetts; and three brothers, Gil Kerr and wife Dorothy, of Ponte Vedra, Florida, Greg Kerr and wife Cindy, of Coopersburg, Pennsylvania, Colin Kerr of Red Cloud, Nebraska, as well as numerous nieces and nephews. John is predeceased by his parents and his older brother, Chris Kerr, who died in 2010. Services will be private. Arrangements are by Conroy-Tully Walker Funeral Home, 172 State Street, Portland. To visit Johns memorial page or to share online condolences, please visit, www.ConroyTullyWalker.com.

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  1. Goodbye old friend……….. It’s been a while since I have seen you but you will remembered by me as a kind and gentle man…….

    – Bob Somers

  2. To Colin & the Family — I am saddened to hear of our HR classmate, John’s passing, and now learn how much I have missed by not knowing about all he has accomplished. I am recalling what some said when JFK died – ‘John, we hardly knew ye…’ But you live on in all the people you have touched and all the caring you have shown. – Peter

    – Peter Patch

  3. I loved John. He was a wise and kind man. We had many happy memories at the Cedar Tavern and Gus’s Restaurant and hanging around his sunny apartment back in the 90s. I was privileged to get to spend as much time with him as I did. My condolences to his family. He shall be missed.

    – Heather Waters

  4. A long time ago in our formative years I knew you at Portsmouth, and enjoyed the bright, kind and thoughtful mind that grew into the extraordinary man described in your obit. You were always a good guy- smart, deep, and quiet when others were shouting. Glad to have known you, shared your wit and curiosity, only sorry to have missed the chance for a reunion….your life mattered, John. Thanks!

    – Tom Keefe

  5. I shall miss seeing you out and about in Portland and at the theater events we shared. I shall miss your warm and gentle eyes and your many kindnesses. But, most of all, I will miss knowing that a kindred spirit walks the earth. You had a way of making me and everyone else feel an important part of your life. RIP.

    – Patricia Mew

  6. John, you were a kind and wise man. I have not seen you in some years, but I think of you often. Goodbye. You are missed.

    – Tom Predhome


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