Emilio Rodrigué was a brilliant Argentine psychoanalyst and writer. He began his psychoanalytic training in Argentina, but in the 1950s he traveled to London where he continued his apprenticeship with Melanie Klein, Paula Heimann and Wilfred Bion. Upon returning to the country, he co-authored, together with Marie Langer and León Grinberg, the first book written in Spanish on Group Psychotherapy. In the 1960s he spent four years at the Austin Riggs Therapeutic Community, Massachusetts, USA. The result of this step was the book Biography of a therapeutic community. He then he began to write fiction; Among his books, the 1969 novel Heroína stands out, which years later was made into a film by Raúl de la Torre. At that time he joined the Plataforma group, which together with the Documento group, resigned from the International Psychoanalytic Association at the end of 1971. In the mid-1970...read more