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Kenneth Levin (born 1944) is a prominent American psychiatrist, historian, and clinical instructor based in Newton, Massachusetts, known for his psychological and historical analyses of Jewish identity and the Arab-Israeli conflict. He has spent over four decades as a member of the psychiatric faculty at Harvard Medical School, maintains a private practice in psychiatry in the Boston area, and has taught at various psychoanalytic training institutes. Levin is widely recognized for his 2005 book The Oslo Syndrome: Delusions of a People Under Siege, which applies psychiatric concepts like 'battered child syndrome' to explain internal psychological pressures within the Jewish community and the Israeli public's response to the peace process. In 2024, he published The Canary on the Couch, exploring the surge of contemporary anti-Semitism in the United States and critiquing the perceived reticence of American Jewish leadership. He is a frequent commentator on Middle East affairs and Jewish communal issues, often focusing on 'Jewish self-hatred' or 'self-denigration' resulting from external hostility. Levin is also the husband of Andrea Levin and a long-time board member of the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting and Analysis (CAMERA). His notable books include Freud's Early Psychology of the Neuroses (1978), Unconscious Fantasy in Psychotherapy (1993), The Oslo Syndrome (2005), and The Canary on the Couch (2024).