Books by Sigmund Freud
Born: 05/06/1856; Died: 09/23/1939Sigmund Freud Biography & Notes
He was born Sigismund Schlomo Freud into a Ashkenazi Jewish family in Freiberg, Moravia, the Austrian Empire (now the Czech Republic). In 1877, at the age of 21, he abbreviated his given name to "Sigmund." Although he was the first-born of three brothers and five sisters among his mother's children, Sigmund had older half-brothers from his father's previous marriage. His family had limited finances and lived in a crowded apartment, but his parents made every effort to foster his intellect (often favoring Sigmund over his siblings), which was apparent from an early age. Sigmund was ranked first in his class in six of eight years of schooling. He went on to attend the University of Vienna at 17, in 1873 to 1881 despite intense anti-Semitism in Austria.
In his 40s, Freud "had numerous psychosomatic disorders as well as exaggerated fears of dying and other phobias". During this time Freud was involved in the task of self-analysis. He explored his own dreams, childhood memories, and the dynamics of his personality development. During this self-analysis, he came to realize the hostility he felt towards his father (Jacob Freud), and "he also recalled his childhood sexual feelings for his mother (Amalia Freud), who was attractive, warm, and protective" (Corey 2001, p. 67). considers this time of emotional difficulty to be the most creative time in Freud's life.
Overall, little is known of Freud's early life, as he destroyed his personal papers at least twice, once in 1885 and again in 1907. Additionally, his later papers were closely guarded in the Sigmund Freud Archives and only available to his official biographer Ernest Jones and a few other members of the inner circle of psychoanalysis.
Freud had little tolerance for colleagues who diverged from his psychoanalytic doctrines. For example, he attempted to expel those who disagreed with the movement or even refused to accept certain aspects of his theory which he considered central (Corey, 2001): one example of such was Wilhelm Reich, who diverged wildly from common psychoanalytic doctrines until he was developing plans to shoot down ufos with a giant orgone gun.
Following the Nazi German Anschluss, Freud fled Austria with his family with the financial help of his patient and friend Princess Marie Bonaparte. On June 4th, 1938, they were allowed across the border into France and then they traveled from Paris to Hampstead, London, England, where they lived at 20 Maresfield Gardens (now the Freud Museum). As he was leaving Germany, Freud was required to sign a statement that he had been treated respectfully by the Nazis.
Freud smoked cigars for most of his life; even after having his jaw removed due to malignancy, he continued to smoke until his death on September 23, 1939. He smoked an entire box of cigars daily. After contracting cancer of the mouth, he underwent over 30 operations to treat the disease; In the end, Freud could no longer tolerate the pain associated with his cancer. He requested that his personal physician visit him at his London home. Freud's death was by a physician-assisted morphine overdose.
Freud's daughter Anna Freud was also a distinguished psychologist, particularly in the fields of child and developmental psychology. Sigmund is the grandfather of painter Lucian Freud and comedian, politician and writer Clement Freud, and the great-grandfather of journalist Emma Freud, fashion designer Bella Freud and media magnates Matthew Freud and Ria Willems.
Sigmund Freud was also both a blood uncle and an uncle-in-law to public relations and propaganda wizard Edward Bernays. Bernays's mother, Anna Freud Bernays, was sister to Sigmund. Bernays's father, Ely Bernays, was brother to Sigmund's wife, Martha Bernays Freud.
Freud has been influential in two related, but distinct ways. He simultaneously developed a theory of the human mind and human behavior, and clinical techniques for attempting to help neurotics.
A lesser known interest of Freud's was neurology. He was an early researcher on the topic of cerebral palsy, then known as "cerebral paralysis". He published several medical papers on the topic. He also showed that the disease existed far before other researchers in his day began to notice and study it. He also suggested that William Little, the man who first identified cerebral palsy, was wrong about lack of oxygen during the birth process being a cause. Instead, he suggested that complications in birth were only a symptom of the problem. It was not until the 1980s that his speculations were confirmed by more modern research.
Freud was an early user and proponent of cocaine as a stimulant. He wrote several articles on the antidepressant qualities of the drug, and he was influenced by his friend and confidant, Wilhelm Fliess, who recommended cocaine for the treatment of the "nasal reflex neurosis." Fleiss operated on Freud and a number of Freud's patients whom he believed to be suffering from the disorder. Emma Eckstein underwent disastrous nasal surgery by Fleiss.
Freud felt that cocaine would work as a cure-all for many disorders, and wrote a well-received paper, "On Coca", explaining its virtues. He prescribed it to his friend Ernst von Fleischl-Marxow to help him beat a morphine addiction he had acquired while treating a disease of the nervous system. Freud also recommended it to many of his close family and friends. He narrowly missed out on obtaining scientific priority for discovering cocaine's anesthetic properties (of which Freud was aware but on which he had not written extensively), after Karl Koller, a colleague of Freud's in Vienna, presented a report to a medical society in 1884 outlining the ways in which cocaine could be used for delicate eye surgery. Freud was bruised by this, especially because this would turn out to be one of the only safe uses of cocaine, as reports of addiction and overdose began to filter in from many places in the world. Freud's medical reputation became somewhat tarnished for his early enthusiasm. Furthermore, Freud's friend Fleischl-Marxow developed an acute case of "cocaine psychosis" as a result of Freud's prescriptions and died a few years later. Freud felt great regret over these events, which later biographers have dubbed "The Cocaine Incident".
Freud hoped that his research would provide a solid scientific basis for his therapeutic technique. The goal of Freudian therapy, or psychoanalysis, was to bring to consciousness repressed thoughts and feelings. According to some of his successors, including his daughter Anna Freud, the goal of therapy is to allow the patient to develop a stronger ego; according to others, notably Jacques Lacan, the goal of therapy is to lead the analysand to a full acknowledgment of his or her inability to satisfy the most basic desires.
Classically, the bringing of unconscious thoughts and feelings to consciousness is brought about by encouraging the patient to talk in free association and to talk about dreams. Another important element of psychoanalysis is a relative lack of direct involvement on the part of the analyst, which is meant to encourage the patient to project thoughts and feelings onto the analyst. Through this process, transference, the patient can reenact and resolve repressed conflicts, especially childhood conflicts with (or about) parents.
Perhaps the most significant contribution Freud has made to modern thought is his conception of the dynamic unconscious. During the 19th century, the dominant trend in Western thought was positivism, the belief that people could ascertain real knowledge concerning themselves and their environment and judiciously exercise control over both. Freud, however, suggested that such declarations of free will are in fact delusions; that we are not entirely aware of what we think and often act for reasons that have little to do with our conscious thoughts. The concept of the unconscious was groundbreaking in that he proposed that awareness existed in layers and that there were thoughts occurring "below the surface." Dreams, which he called the "royal road to the unconscious", provided the best access to our unconscious life and the best illustration of its "logic", which was different than the logic of conscious thought. Freud developed his first topology of the psyche in The Interpretation of Dreams where he proposed the argument that the unconscious exists and described a method for gaining access to it. The Preconscious was described as a layer between conscious and unconscious thought—that which we could access with a little effort. Thus for Freud, the ideals of the Enlightenment, positivism, and rationalism could be achieved through understanding, transforming, and mastering the unconscious, rather than through denying or repressing it.
Crucial to the operation of the unconscious is "repression." According to Freud, people often experience thoughts and feelings that are so painful that people cannot bear them. Such thoughts and feelings and associated memories could not, Freud argued, be banished from the mind, but could be banished from consciousness. Thus they come to constitute the unconscious. Although Freud later attempted to find patterns of repression among his patients in order to derive a general model of the mind, he also observed that individual patients repress different things. Moreover, Freud observed that the process of repression is itself a non-conscious act (in other words, it did not occur through people willing away certain thoughts or feelings). Freud supposed that what people repressed was in part determined by their unconscious. In other words, the unconscious was for Freud both a cause and effect of repression.
Later, Freud distinguished between three concepts of the unconscious: the descriptive unconscious, the dynamic unconscious, and the system unconscious. The descriptive unconscious referred to all those features of mental life of which we are not subjectively aware. The dynamic unconscious, a more specific construct, referred to mental process and contents which are defensively removed from consciousness as a result of conflictual forces or "dynamics". The system unconscious denoted the idea that when mental processes are repressed, they become organized by principles different than those of the conscious mind, such as condensation and displacement.
Eventually, Freud abandoned the idea of the system unconscious, replacing it with the concept of the id (discussed below). Throughout his career, however, he retained the descriptive and dynamic conceptions of the unconscious.
Freud also believed that the libido developed in individuals by changing its object, a process designed by the concept of sublimation. He argued that humans are born "polymorphously perverse," meaning that any number of objects could be a source of pleasure. He further argued that, as humans developed, they fixated on different and specific objects through their stages of development first in the oral stage (exemplified by an infant's pleasure in nursing), then in the anal stage (exemplified by a toddler's pleasure in controlling his or her bowels), then in the phallic stage. Freud argued that children then passed through a stage where they fixated on the mother as a sexual object, known as the Oedipus Complex but that the child eventually overcame and repressed this desire because of its taboo nature. (The lesser known Electra complex refers to such a fixation upon the father.)
Freud hoped to prove that his model was universally valid and thus turned to ancient mythology and contemporary ethnography for comparative material. Freud named his new theory the Oedipus Complex after the famous Greek tragedy Oedipus Rex by Sophocles.“I found in myself a constant love for my mother, and jealousy of my father. I now consider this to be a universal event in childhood,” Freud said. Freud sought to anchor this pattern of development in the dynamics of the mind. Each stage is a progression into adult sexual maturity, characterized by a strong ego and the ability to delay gratification. (see Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality.) He used the Oedipus conflict to point out how much he believed that people desire incest and must repress that desire. The Oedipus conflict was described as a state of psychosexual development and awareness. He also turned to anthropological studies of totemism and argued that totemism reflected a ritualized enactment of a tribal Oedipal conflict.
No discussion of Sigmund Freud is complete without some mention of his highly influential and controversial views on the role and psychology of women. Freud was an early champion of both sexual freedom and education for women (Freud, "Civilized Sexual Morality and Modern Nervousness"). Some feminists, however, have argued that at worst his views of women's sexual development set the progress of women in Western culture back decades, and that at best they lent themselves to the ideology of female inferiority. Believing as he did that women were a kind of mutilated male, who must learn to accept her deformity (the lack of a penis) and submit to some imagined biological imperative, he contributed to the vocabulary of misogyny. Terms such as "penis envy" and "castrating" (both used to describe women who attempted to excel in any field outside the home) contributed to discouraging women from obtaining education or entering any field dominated by men, until the 1970s.
On the other hand, feminist theorists such as Juliet Mitchell, Nancy Chodorow, Jessica Benjamin, Jane Gallop, and Jane Flax have argued that psychoanalytic theory is essentially related to the feminist project and must, like other theoretical traditions, be adapted by women to free it from vestiges of sexism. Freud's views are still being questioned by people concerned about women's equality. Another feminist who finds potential use of Freud's theories in the feminist movement is Shulamith Firestone. In "Freudianism: The Misguided Feminism", she discusses how Freudianism is essentially completely accurate, with the exception of one crucial detail: everywhere that Freud writes "penis", the word should be replaced with "power".
It is interesting to note that originally Freud believed childhood sexual abuse to be the cause of hysteria—but he then recanted this so called "seduction theory" ("The Index of Sexual Abuse"), claiming that he had found many cases in which apparent memories of childhood sexual abuse were based more on imagination than on real events. Instead he began to emphasize the Oedipus Theory, which asserts that everyone unconsciously wishes to have sex with their parents. There is an ongoing controversy among Freud scholars regarding Freud's actual beliefs on this issue.he id, ego, and superego
In his later work, Freud proposed that the psyche was divided into three parts: Id, Ego, and Superego.
The unconscious Id (Latin, = "it" = es in the original German) represented primary process thinking, our most primitive need gratification type thoughts. The Superego (also unconscious) (überich in German) represented our socially-induced conscience and counteracted the Id with moral and ethical thoughts. Freud based the term Id on the work of Georg Groddeck. The largely conscious Ego (ich) stands in between both to balance our primitive needs and our moral/ethical beliefs. A healthy ego provides the ability to adapt to reality and interact with the outside world in a way that accommodates both Id and Superego. The general claim that the mind is not a monolithic or homogeneous thing continues to have an enormous influence on people outside of psychology. Freud was especially concerned with the dynamic relationship between these three parts of the mind, in particular, how they enter into conflict with each other.
According to Freud, the defense mechanisms are the method by which the ego can solve the conflicts between the superego and the id. The use of the mechanisms required Eros (named after the Greek god of love; Cupid in Roman mythology), and they are helpful if moderately used. The use of defense mechanisms may attenuate the conflict between the id and superego, but their overuse or reuse rather than confrontation can lead to either anxiety or guilt which may result in psychological disorders such as depression. His daughter Anna Freud had done the most significant work on this field, yet she credited Sigmund with defense mechanisms, as he began the work. The defense mechanisms include: denial, reaction formation, displacement, repression/suppression (the proper term), projection, intellectualisation, rationalisation, compensation, sublimation and regressive emotionality.
* Denial occurs when someone fends off awareness of an unpleasant truth or of a reality that is a threat to the ego. For example, a student may have received a bad grade on a report card but tells himself that grades don't matter. (Some early writers argued for a striking parallel between Freudian denial and Nietzsche's ideas of ressentiment and the revaluation of values that he attributed to "herd" or "slave" morality.)
* Reaction formation takes place when someone takes the opposite approach consciously compared to what he wants unconsciously. For example, someone may engage in violence against another race because, he claims, they are inferior, when unconsciously it is he himself who feels inferior.
* Displacement takes place when someone redirects emotion from a "dangerous" object to a "safe" one, such as punching a pillow to avoid hitting a friend.
* Repression occurs when an experience is so painful (such as war trauma) that it is subconsciously forced from consciousness, while suppression is a conscious effort to do the same.
* Psychological projection occurs when a person "projects" his or her own undesirable thoughts, motivations, desires, feelings—basically parts of oneself—onto someone or something else. An example of this would be to say that Alice doesn't like Bob, but rather than to admit she doesn't like Bob, she will project her sentiment onto Bob, saying that Bob doesn't like her.
* Intellectualisation involves removing one's self, emotionally, from a stressful event. Intellectualisation is often accomplished through rationalisation rather than accepting reality, one may explain it away to remove one's self.
* Rationalization involves constructing a logical justification for a decision that was originally arrived at through a different mental process. For example, Jim may have bought a tape player to listen to self-help tapes, but he tells his friends he bought it so that he can listen to classic rock mixes for fear of his actual reason being rejected.
* Compensation occurs when someone takes up one behavior because one cannot accomplish another behavior. For example, the second born child may clown around to get attention since the older child is already an accomplished scholar.
* Sublimation is the channeling of impulses to socially accepted behaviours. For instance, the use of a dark, gloomy poem to describe life by such poets as Emily Dickinson.
The life and death instincts
Freud believed that humans were driven by two conflicting central desires: libidinal energy (Eros) and the death drive (Thanatos). Freud's description of Eros/Libido included all creative, life-producing drives. The Death Drive (or death instinct) represented an urge inherent in all living things to return to a state of calm, or, ultimately, of non-existence. The presence of the Death Drive was only recognized in his later years, and the contrast between the two represents a revolution in his manner of thinking.
Psychology of religion
Freud gave explanations of the genesis of religion in various of his writings. . In Totem and Taboo, he proposed that humans originally banded together in primal hordes, consisting of a male, a number of females and the offspring of this polygamous arrangement. According to Freud’s psychoanalytical theory, a male child early in life has sexual desires for his mother, the Oedipus Complex, which he held to be universal. The father is protective, so the males love him, but they are also jealous of their father because of his relationship with their mothers. Finding that individually they could not defeat the father-leader, they banded together to kill him. After the murder, they ate him in a ritual meal, thereby taking into themselves the substance of the father’s hated power but the subsequent guilt of the sons leads them to elevate his memory and to worship him. The super-ego then takes the place of the father as the source of internalised authority. A ban was then put upon incest and upon marriage within the clan, and a symbolic animal sacrifice was substituted for the ritual killing of a human being.
In Moses and Monotheism Freud reconstructed biblical history in accord with his general theory, but biblical scholars and historians would not accept his account since it was in opposition to the point of view of the accepted criteria of historical evidence. His ideas were also developed in The Future of an Illusion. When Freud spoke of religion as an illusion, he maintained that it is a fantasy structure from which a man must be set free if he is to grow to maturity; and in his treatment of the unconscious he moved toward atheism.
Psychotherapy
Freud trained as a medical doctor, and as such, he believed his research methods and conclusions were scientific. However, his research and practice were condemned by many of his peers, as well as later psychologists and academics. Some, like Juliet Mitchell or, have suggested that this is because his basic claim, that many of our conscious thoughts and actions are motivated by unconscious fears and desires, implicitly challenges universal and objective claims about the world (some proponents of science conclude that this invalidates Freudian theory as a means of interpreting and explaining human behavior. Psychoanalysis today maintains the same ambivalent relationship with medicine and academia that Freud experienced during his life.
Current psychotherapists, who seek to treat mental illness, relate to Freudian psychoanalysis in different ways. Some psychotherapists have modified this approach and have developed a variety of "psychodynamic" models and therapies. Other therapists reject Freud's model of the mind, but have adapted elements of his therapeutic method, especially his reliance on patients' talking as a form of therapy. Experimental psychologists generally reject Freud's methods and theories. Psychiatrists train as medical doctors, but like most medical doctors in Freud's time, most reject his theory of the mind, and generally rely more on psychoactive drugs than talk in their treatments.
Freud's psychological theories are hotly disputed today and many leading academic and research psychiatrists regard him as a charlatan, but there are also many leading academic and research psychiatrists who agree with the core of his work. Psychiatric disorders are often considered purely diseases of the brain, the etiology of which is principally genetic. This view emphasizes constitutional factors in mental illness. Freud believed that the vast majority of disorders result from a combination of constitutional and environmental factors, the relative importance of each varying from one person to another.
Philosophy
Freud introduced three concepts that represent a break with prior Western philosophy, whatever the value of psychoanalysis as a form of psychotherapy.
* He created a model of mental processes that breaks with the Cartesian cogito. For Freud, thought emerges from processes that are not accessible to the subject herself through direct introspection. In a more historicized sense, Karl Marx's analysis of ideology precedes Freud's, but Freud makes non-transparency of subjectivity more fundamental. Psychosexual history (in Freud's view) and membership in a social class (in Marx's view) lie at the core of the goals people have and the ideas they use to justify them.
* Freud examined the "rationality" to be found even in material regarded as thoroughly inscrutable, irrational and meaningless, such as dreams, slips, neurotic symptoms, and the verbal productions of psychotics. Conversely, he discovered "irrationality" (i.e., purely arbitrary and idiosyncratic elements) even in material that is manifestly "rational" (i.e., work activities, political philosophy, conventional social behavior).
* Freud introduced a novel discursive technique in the talking cure. Psychoanalysis enables people to mitigate distress through the indirect revelation of unconscious content. The process of psychoanalysis reveals retrospectively how individuals unconsciously contribute to problems they encounter, according to specific logics of condensation and transference.
Critical reactions
Freud's model of psychosexual development has been criticized from different perspectives. Some have attacked Freud's claim that infants are sexual beings (and, implicitly, Freud's expanded notion of sexuality). Others have accepted Freud's expanded notion of sexuality, but have argued that this pattern of development is not universal, nor necessary for the development of a healthy adult. Instead, they have emphasized the social and environmental sources of patterns of development. Moreover, they call attention to social dynamics Freud de-emphasized or ignored (such as class relations). This branch of Freudian critique owes a great deal to the work of Herbert Marcuse.
Some criticize Freud's rejection of positivism. The philosopher of science Karl Popper formulated a method to distinguish science from non-science. For Popper, all proper scientific theories are potentially falsifiable. If a theory is incapable of being falsified, then it cannot be considered scientific. Popper pointed out that Freud's theories of psychology can always be "verified", since no type of behaviour could ever falsify them. Although Popper's demarcation between science and non-science is widely accepted among scientists, it remains a controversial one itself within philosophy of science and philosophy in general. In academic psychology, a distinction is generally made between theories (which are considered too abstract to be falsifiable) and specific hypotheses (which derive from a theory and may be tested by research).
Behaviourism, evolutionary psychology, and cognitive psychology reject psychoanalysis as a pseudoscience. Humanistic psychology maintains that psychoanalysis is a demeaning and incorrect view of human beings. The other schools of psychology have produced alternative methods of psychotherapy, including behavior therapy, cognitive therapy, and person centred psychotherapy.
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'The Wolfman' and Other Cases by Sigmund Freud ( 2002)
This volume contains the case histories of "Little Hans", "The Ratman" and "The Wolfman". It also includes the essay "Some Character Types", in which Freud draws on the work of Shakespeare, Ibsen and Nietzsche to demonstrate different kinds of resistance to therapy.
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Abstracts of the Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud by Sigmund Freud ( 1973) |
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Analyzing Freud Letters of H.D., Bryher, and Their Circle by H. D. (Hilda Doolittle) ( 2002)
A landmark book in the studies of Freud, H.D., modernism, gender, and sexuality. The poet H.D. (1886-1961) was in psychoanalysis with Sigmund Freud in Vienna during the spring of 1933 and again in the fall of 1934. She visited him daily at his study at 19 Berggasse, while outside Nazi thugs and militia bullied their way through the streets. Freud was old, and fragile. H.D. was forty-six and despairing of her writing life, which seemed to have reached a dead end, for all her success. Her sessions with Freud proved to be the point of transition, the funnel into which were poured her memories of the past and associations in the presentand from which she emerged reborn. H.D. came to Freud at the urging of her companion, the novelist Bryher (1884-1983), the daughter of a wealthy British shipping magnate. Freud welcomed H.D. as a creative spirit whose work he respected, but he did ask her not to prepare for their sessions, write about them in her journal, or talk about them with her friends, especially Bryher, who remained home in England. H.D.'s letters from Vienna filled the gap. Breezy, informal, irreverent, vibrant with detail, they revolve around her hours with Freud, making her correspondence unique in the spectrum of reminiscences, journals, memoirs, and biographies swirling around the legacy of the "Professor" and the movement he founded. The volume includes H.D. and Bryher's letters, as well as letters by Freud to H.D. and Bryher, most of them published for the first time. In addition, the book includes H.D. and Bryher's letters to and from Havelock Ellis, Kenneth MacPherson, Robert McAlmon, Ezra Pound, and Anna Freud, among others. Fully annotated with Index and Photographs
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Autobiographical Study by Sigmund Freud ( 1989)
First published in 1925, and commissioned as part of a series of "autobiographies" by members of the medical profession, this is a narrative of the professional life of Dr. Freud--especially the early years--which serves as one of the many "introductions" to psychoanalysis that Freud wrote throughout his life. After a few pages of biographical material, Freud recounts his early medical training and his study with Charcot; his experiences and eventual disillusionment with hypnosis; his association with Breuer; his theory of the unconscious, his use of the technique of free association, how he "stumbled" onto the Oedipus complex; the publication in 1900 of "The Interpretation of Dreams"; and the "internal development" and "external history" of psychoanalysis up to the time of the writing.
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The Basic Writings of Sigmund Freud Psychopathology of Everyday Life/the Interpretation of Dreams/Three Contributions to the Theory of Sex/Wit and by Sigmund Freud, A.A. Brill ( 1995)
This essential text colleects in one volume, six of Freud's most important works: Psychopathology of Everyday Life, The Interpretation of Dreams, Three Contributions to the Theory of Sex, Wit and its Relation to the Unconscious, Totem and Taboo, and The History of the Psychoanalytic Movement.
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The Basic Writings of Sigmund Freud by Sigmund Freud ( 1977)
Presents a comprehensive selection of the important writings of the nineteenth-century psychiatrist.
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Beginner's Guide to Dream Analysis Dream Symbols, Interpretations, Sex, Lust, Love, and Wishes by Sigmund Freud ( 2003) |
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Beyond the Pleasure Principle by Sigmund Freud ( 1990)
In the course of theorizing about psychoanalysis, Freud changed his mind on some important matters. Perhaps the most striking was his revision of instinct, or desire, theory. "Beyond the Pleasure Principle," published in 1920, is the first clear statement of Freud's new drive theory: love and life now stand over against aggression and death. The book represents an important theoretical revision of Freud's earlier ideas and a turning point in psychoanalytic theory.
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Briefe an Wilhelm Fliess, 1887-1904 by Sigmund Freud, Michael Schroter, J. Moussaieff Masson ( 1986) |
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Briefwechsel by Sigmund Freud, Carl G. Jung ( 1974) |
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Briefwechsel, 1908-1938 by Sigmund Freud, Ludwig Binswanger ( 1992) |
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Cartas A La Novia by Sigmund Freud ( 2002) |
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Case Histories 1 by Sigmund Freud ( 1990) |
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Case Histories 2 by Sigmund Freud ( 1988) |
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Character and Culture by Sigmund Freud ( 1963)
These 28 essays by Freud, dating from 1907 through 1937, exemplify the essay form: topical, digressive, subjective--and eminently quotable. Subjects range from Michelangelo's Moses, a letter to Einstein, thoughts on Shakespeare, the sexual symbolism of a hat, and an essay on humor."The Theme of the Three Caskets" is included.
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El Chiste Y Su Relacion Con Lo Inconsciente by Sigmund Freud ( 1969) |
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Civilization And Its Discontents by Sigmund Freud ( 1963) |
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Civilization and Its Discontents by Sigmund Freud ( 1989)
During the summer of 1929, Freud worked on what became this seminal volume of twentieth-century thought. It stands as a brilliant summary of the views on culture form a psychoanalytic perspective that he had been developing since the turn of the century. It is a tribute to the late theory of mind--the so-called structural theory, with its stress on aggression, indeed the death drive, as the pitiless adversary of eros. It is an exemplary exploration of the conflict between personal needs and desires and the restrictions society must impose in order to function.
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Civilization and Its Discontents and Other Essays by Sigmund Freud ( 1994) |
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Cocaine Papers by Sigmund Freud ( 1974) |
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Collected Papers of Sigmund Freud by Sigmund Freud ( 1959) |
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The Complete Correspondence of Sigmund Freud and Ernest Jones 1908-1939 by Sigmund Freud, Ernest Jones, R. Andre W Paskauskas ( 1993)
Contains nearly seven hundred previously unpublished letters, postcards, and telegrams written during three decades of correspondence between Freud and his admiring younger colleague and future biographer, Ernest Jones.
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Complete Correspondence of Sigmund Freud and Karl Abraham, 1907-1925 by Sigmund Freud ( 2002) |
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The Complete Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis by Sigmund Freud ( 1966)
These translated lectures, originally delivered by Freud in two winters from 1915 to 1917 and in 1932, outline most of his theories, including dream interpretation and psychoanalytic therapy.
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Complete Letters of Sigmund Freud to Wilhelm Fliess, 1887-1904 by Sigmund Freud ( 1985)
Including 133 documents never before made public and 138 previously published only in part, this volume collects the complete correspondence of Freud to his closest friend during the period that saw the birth of psychoanalysis.
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Concordance to the Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud by Sigmund Freud, Samuel A. Guttman, Stephen Maxfield Parrish, Randall L. Jones ( 1980) |
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The Correspondence of Sigmund Freud and Sandor Ferenczi 1908-1914 by Sigmund Freud, Eva Brabant, Sandor Ferenczi ( 1994)
The young psychiatrist from Budapest had studied medicine in Vienna, he had read The Interpretation of Dreams, and now he was to meet its author. Seventeen years Sigmund Freud's junior, Sandor Ferenczi (1873-1933) sent off a note anticipating the pleasure of the older man's acquaintance - thus beginning a correspondence that would flourish over the next twenty-five years, and that today provides a living record of some of the most important insights and developments of psychoanalysis, worked out through the course of a deep and profoundly complicated friendship. This volume opens in January of 1908 and closes on the eve of World War I. Letter by letter, a "fellowship of life, thoughts, and interests", as Freud came to describe it, unfolds here as a passionate exchange of ideas and theories. Ferenczi's contribution to psychoanalysis was, Freud said, "pure gold", and many of the younger man's notions and concepts, proposed in these letters, later made their way into Freud's works on homosexuality, paranoia, trauma, transference, and other topics. To the two men's mutual scientific interests others were soon added, and their correspondence expanded in richness and complexity as Ferenczi attempted to work out his personal and professional conflicts under the direction of his devoted and sometimes critical elder colleague.
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The Correspondence of Sigmund Freud and Sandor Ferenczi 1914-1919 by Sigmund Freud, Eva Brabant, Ernst Falzeder, Sandor Ferenczi, Patrizia Giampieri-Deutsch ( 1996)
The complete correspondence spans the years 1908 through 1933, and thus covers the decisive decades in the early history of psychoanalysis. Volume two covers the correspondence of Freud and Ferenczi from July 1914 through December 1919.
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Correspondencia / Correspondence :Con Sigmund Freud, Rainer Maria Rilke Y Arthur Schnitzler Con Sigmund Freud, Rainer Maria Rilke Y Arthur Schnitzler by Hans-Ulrich Lindken, Jeffrey B. Berlin, Arthur Schnitzler, Stefan Zweig, Rainer Maria Rilke, Sigmund Freud ( 2004) |
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Das Motiv Der Kastchenwahl Faksimileausg by Sigmund Freud, Ilse Grubrich-Simitis, Heinz Politzer ( 1977) |
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Delusion And Dream by Sigmund Freud ( 2005) |
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The Diary of Sigmund Freud 1929-1939 A Record of the Final Decade by Sigmund Freud, Michael Molnar, England) Freud Museum (London ( 1992)
During the final ten years of his life in Vienna and London, Sigmund Freud kept a diary. On large, unbound sheets of paper, he recorded in brief the significant events that befell him and his family as he faced the ravages of terminal illness and the brutality of the Nazis who forced him into exile. 100 photographs.
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Die Entdeckung Des Siebten Kontinents Der Burgerliche Revolutionar Sigmund Freud Zu Seinem 50. Todestag by Sigmund Freud, Thomas Kornbichler ( 1989) |
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Dora An Analysis of a Case of Hysteria by Sigmund Freud ( 1993)
Freud's case study of an 18-year old female patient who comes to him with hysterical symptoms is one of his most fascinating cases. In "Fragments of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria", he unravels the mystery of "Dora" and her relationships, using her dream reports and her mannerisms.
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Dream Psychology Psychoanalysis for Beginners by Sigmund Freud ( 2007) |
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Dreams in Folklore by Sigmund Freud ( 1958) |
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Early Psychoanalytic Writings by Sigmund Freud ( 1985) |
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The Ego and the Id by Sigmund Freud, James Strachey ( 1962)
In 1923, in this volume, Freud worked out important implications of the structural theory of mind that he had first set forth three years earlier in Beyond the Pleasure Principle. The Ego and the Id ranks high among the works of Freud's later years. The heart of his concern is the ego, which he sees battling with three forces: the id, the super-ego, and the outside world.
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Ensayos Sobre La Vida Sexual Y La Teoria De Las Neurosis by Sigmund Freud ( 2003) |
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Esquema Del Psicoanalisis Y Otros Escritos by Sigmund Freud ( 1974) |
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The Essentials of Psycho-Analysis by Sigmund Freud ( 2008)
Covers the themes that Sigmund Freud explored in his work from the meaning of dreams and the concept of the unconscious, instinctual and sexual life to the structure of the personality. This collection is intended as a guide to the principle concepts of psycho-analysis.
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Essentials of Psycho-Analysis The Definitive Collection of Sigmund Freud's Writing by Sigmund Freud ( 1988) |
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Five Lectures on Psycho-analysis by Sigmund Freud ( 1989)
In 1909 Freud delivered five lectures at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts. He spoke on the foundations of psychoanalysis, and the lectures were published the following year. Until the far more extensive "Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis," "Five Lectures on Psychoanalysis" was the authoritative summary of Freud's ideas, and it remains a lucid general introduction.
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Freud Dictionary of Psychoanalysis by Sigmund Freud ( 1969) |
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Freud A Cultura Judaica E a Modernidade by Sigmund Freud, Alberto Dines, Maria Olympia A. F. Franca ( 2002) |
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Freud Among the Philosophers The Psychoanalytic Unconscious and Its Philosophical Critics by Sigmund Freud, Donald Levy ( 1996)
Philosophical arguments against Freud's idea of the unconscious, the central concept of psychoanalysis, have existed as long as psychoanalysis itself. In this highly original book, Donald Levy considers the most important and persuasive of these philosophical criticisms, as articulated by four major figures: Ludwig Wittgenstein, William James, Alasdair MacIntyre, and Adolf Grunbaum. When their basic misunderstandings (or lack of awareness) of psychoanalytic ideas are set aside, Levy contends, the criticisms are neutralized.Offering the first comprehensive critical accounts of Wittgenstein's and James's critiques of the concept of the unconscious, the author finds that Wittgenstein's objections are ultimately religious rather than scientific and that James's dismissal of the idea fails to take into account the role resistance plays in defining unconscious mental activity. Levy maintains that MacIntyre's understanding of the unconscious as intrinsically unobservable overlooks crucial features of the technique of free association and that Grunbaum's contention that only extraclinical testing can determine the truth of psychoanalytic interpretations rests on a false dichotomy between intra- and extraclinical evidence. Thus Levy untangles the main confusions that have surrounded psychoanalysis since its inception and provides a clearer view of what it is and what may be gained from it.
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The Freud Reader by Sigmund Freud ( 1995)
The fifty-one texts in this volume range from Freud's theories on dream analysis, to essays on sexuality, and on to his late writings, including "Civilization and Its Discontents." Peter Gay, a leading scholar of Freud and his work, has carefully chosen these selections to provide a full portrait of Freud's thought. His clear introductions to the selections help guide the reader's journey through each work. Most of the selections are reproduced in full, and all are from the Standard Edition, the only English translation for which Freud gave approval.
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Freud on Women A Reader by Sigmund Freud, Elisabeth Young-Bruehl ( 1990)
A chronological selection of Freud's writings on women traces the evolution of his views and is accompanied by brief commentary.
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Freud's Discovery of Psychoanalysis The Politics of Hysteria by Sigmund Freud, William J. McGrath ( 1986) |
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Freud's On Narcissism--an Introduction by Sigmund Freud, Peter Fonagy, Joseph Sandler, Ethel Spector Person, International Psycho-Analytical Association ( 1991) |
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Freud, Sex, and Dreams A Beginner's Guide to Dream Psychology by Sigmund Freud ( 2003) |
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Freud-Legende Drei Studien Zum Psychoanalytischen Denken by Sigmund Freud, Samuel M. Weber ( 1979) |
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The Freud/Jung Letters The Correspondence Between Sigmund Freud and C.G. Jung by Sigmund Freud, Ralph Manheim, Carl G. Jung, William McGuire, Alan McGlashan, R. F. C. Hull ( 1994)
This abridged edition makes the Freud/Jung correspondence accessible to a general readership at a time of renewed critical and historical reevaluation of the documentary roots of modern psychoanalysis. This edition reproduces William McGuire's definitive introduction, but does not contain the critical apparatus of the original edition.
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Future of an Illusion by Sigmund Freud, James Strachey ( 1989)
In the manner of the eighteenth-century philosophe, Freud argued that religion and science were mortal enemies. Early in the century he began to think about religion psychoanalytically and to discuss it in his writings. "The Future of an Illusion" (1927), Freud's best known and most emphatic psychoanalytic exploration of religion, is the culmination of a lifelong pattern of thinking.
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General Introduction to Psychoanalysis the Authori by Sigmund Freud ( 1920) |
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General Psychological Theory by Sigmund Freud ( ) |
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General Psychological Theory Papers on Metapsychology by Sigmund Freud ( 1997) |
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General Selection from the Works of Sigmund Freud by Sigmund Freud, John Rickman ( 1989)
This unique anthology of Freud's work takes the reader through the successive reformulations of his definition of psychoanalysis in order to provide a clear understanding of the development of his theories. Includes, in whole or in part, all of Freud's major writings from "The Origin and Development of Psychoanalysis" to "The Ego and The Id."
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General Selections from the Works of Sigmund Freud by Sigmund Freud ( 1967)
Freud's writings disclose the origin, development, and dynamics of psychoanalysis together with probing such concepts as negation, repression, narcissism, melancholia, group psychology, and the ego and the id.
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Gradiva Delusion and Dream in Wilhelm Jensen's Gradiva by Wilhelm Jensen, Sigmund Freud ( 2003)
Here together in one edition is the strange and evocative "Pompeiian Fancy" by German author Wilhelm Jensen and one of the major texts of psychoanalys in Freud's oeuve, which discusses the role of delusion and dream in Jensen's writing. This book has been very popular in the previous Sun & Moon Press edition, and the two works were also the subject of Anne and Patrick Poriers's art, shown recently and the Getty Museum in Los Angeles.
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Gradiva/Delusion and Dream in Wilhelm Jensen's Gradiva/2 Books in 1 Volume by Sigmund Freud, Wilhelm Jensen ( 1992) |
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Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego by Sigmund Freud ( 1975) |
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Heresy Sandor Rado and the Psychoanalytic Movement by Sigmund Freud, Paul Roazen, Bluma Swerdloff ( 1995)
"My mother was the source of my brains and my father the mother of kindness", said Sandor Rado, a Hungarian analyst whom Freud first embraced but with whom he was later displeased. In Heresy: Sandor Rado and the Psychoanalytic Movement, Paul Roazen and Bluma Swerdloff use interviews with Rado and his family to bring to life one of Freud's foremost followers, who later founded his own institute and psychodynamic orientation, one that focused on motivation rather than instinct. Based on interviews sponsored by the Columbia University Oral History Project, and including Freud's letters to Rado, this is a personal account of Rado and the life events that shaped him and his theories. Rado's life in late nineteenth-century Hungary, the enduring influence of his mother, his meetings with Freud (who made three slips of the tongue during their first encounter), his analysis with Karl Abraham, his affair with Helene Deutsch (she called it a "companionship of suffering"), and Rank and Ferenczi's downfalls are vividly depicted. Rado's radical departure from Freudian theories of femininity, a reformulation daringly in keeping with today's gender debates, is also included. Rado freed himself from phallocentrism, abandoning the notions of universal castration fear and penis envy. He contended that men and woman are different, which does not mean that women are inferior. He saw women as having a greater emotional capacity based on their biological role as child bearers and nurturers. In 1963, as further evidence of his prescience, Rado prophesied the current crisis in psychotherapy, noting that "the old-fashioned therapeutic practice will disappear for lack of money". He anticipated that the influenceof biochemical genetics was going to be "so enormous that it would be bootless to try to outline it". Dr. Swerdloff uses Rado's predictions and an analysis of the present debate to demonstrate the need to steer psychoanalysis toward a more scientific course.
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History of the Psychoanalytic Movement by Sigmund Freud ( 2004) |
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Infantile Cerebral Paralysis by Sigmund Freud ( 1968) |
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Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety by Sigmund Freud ( 1977)
Setting forth in rich detail Freud's new theory of anxiety, Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety (1926) is evidence for one of them. In rethinking his earlier work on the subject, Freud saw several types of anxiety at work in the mind and here argues that anxiety causes repression, rather than the other way around.
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The Interpretation of Dreams by Sigmund Freud ( 1983)
This ground-breaking work, which Freud considered his most valuable, forever changed the way we think about our dreams. In it, Freud made this century's startling discoveries about why we dream, what we dream about, and what dreams really mean.
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Introduccion Al Psicoanalisis by Sigmund Freud ( 2002) |
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Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis by Sigmund Freud ( 1989)
In these lectures, which Freud gave in 1915-16 and 1916-17 at the University of Vienna, Freud gradually brings his audience into the ambiance of psychoanalytic ideas. He begins with the subject of slips of various kinds, continues with the topic of dreams, and concludes with the more difficult subject matter of the neuroses. The lectures were a success when he delivered them and an even greater success in print.
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The Joke and Its Relation to the Unconscious by Sigmund Freud ( 2003) |
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Kulturtheoretische Schriften by Sigmund Freud ( 1986) |
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La Interpretacion De Los Suenos by Sigmund Freud ( 1966) |
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Leonardo Da Vinci Amemory of His Childhood by Sigmund Freud ( 1999) Routledge is now re-issuing this prestigious series of 204 volumes originally published between 1910 and 1965. The titles include works by key figures such asC.G. Jung, Sigmund Freud, Jean Piaget, Otto Rank, James Hillman, Erich Fromm, Karen Horney and Susan Isaacs. Each volume is available on its own, as part of a themed mini-set, or as part of a specially-priced 204-volume set. A brochure listing each title in the International Library of Psychology series is available upon request. |
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Leonardo Da Vinci and a Memory of His Childhood by Sigmund Freud, James Strachey ( 1989)
Freud's speculative psychological biography of Leonardo da Vinci, a man for whom Freud felt great admiration and respect.
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Letters of Sigmund Freud by Sigmund Freud, Ernst L. Freud ( 1992)
First extensive selection of Freud's correspondence: 315 letters to Einstein, Jung, H. G. Wells, Thomas Mann, many others. Numerous love letters to Martha Bernays. Bibliography. Footnotes.
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The Letters of Sigmund Freud and Arnold Zweig by Sigmund Freud, Arnold Zweig, El Robson-Scott ( 1987)
The correspondence between the famed psychiatrist and the Austrian writer in which they discuss their work, anti-Semitism, and politics.
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The Letters of Sigmund Freud to Eduard Silberstein, 1871-1881 by Sigmund Freud, Arnold J. Pomerans, Walter Boehlich ( 1991)
This collection of nearly 80 letters, written by Freud to his boyhood chum Eduard Silberstein over a ten-year period, attests to an early, whimsical life and to the existense of a deeply sensitive, observant youth. These letters will be a rich resource for scholars and all those interested in Sigmund Freud's formative life.
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Letters of Sigmund Freud, 1873-1939; by Sigmund Freud, Ernst L. Freud ( 1970) |
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El Malestar En LA Cultura Y Otros Ensayos by Sigmund Freud ( 1970) |
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The Meaning of Illness ; Selected Psychoanalytic Writings by Sigmund Freud, Georg Groddeck, Lore Schacht ( 1977) |
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Les Mots De Freud by Sigmund Freud, Sempe, A. de Mijolla ( 1982) |
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New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis by Sigmund Freud ( 1965) |
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Oeuvres Completes Psychanalyse by Sigmund Freud, Andre Bourguignon, Jean Laplanche, Pierre Cotet ( 2006) |
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On Freud's "a Child Is Being Beaten" by International Psycho-Analytical Association ( 1997)
This is the fifth volume in the series "Contemporary Freud: Turning Points and Critical Issues," co-published with the International Psychoanalytical Association. This book, like the others in the series, presents a classic essay by Freud, followed by discussions that set Freud's work in context and demonstrate its contemporary relevance. The prominent analysts, analytic teachers, and theoreticians who have contributed to this volume represent diverse perspectives as well as diverse regions of the psychoanalytic world. "A Child Is Being Beaten" (1919) deals with the theoretical problem of how pleasure and suffering become linked. Freud explores the childhood beating fantasy (which is often accompanied by sexual arousal), its transformational stages, the changing cast of protagonists, and the differences
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On Freud's Analysis Terminable and Interminable by Sigmund Freud ( 1991) |
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On Freud's Creative Writers and Day-Dreaming by Ethel Spector Person, International Psycho-Analytical Association, Peter Fonagy ( 1995)
First presented as an informal lecture in 1907, "Creative Writers and Day-dreaming" pursues two lines of inquiry: it explores the origins of daydreaming and its relation to the play of children, and it investigates the creative process. Following an introduction by Ethel Spector Person, the contributors to this volume--Marcos Aguinis, Harry Trosman, Harold P. Blum, Jose A. Infante, Joseph Sandler and Anne-Marie Sandler, Ronald Britton, Janine Chasseguet-Smirgel, Elizabeth Tabak de Bianchedi, Robert N. Emde, and Moises Lemlij--provide commentaries on Freud's essay, explicating the twists and turns in psychoanalytic theories of fantasy and in applied psychoanalysis. Their essays place Freud's paper in historical context, describe the clinical value of daydreams and fantasies, offer a Kleinian view of fantasy, provide analytic approaches to creativity and fantasy, comment on the ambiguity caused by multiple translations of Freud's text, and reframe the idea of fantasy from a modern biological and developmental approach.
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On Freud's Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego by International Psycho-Analytical Association ( 2001) |
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On Freud's Observations on Transference-Love by Sigmund Freud, Aiban Hagelin, Peter Fonagy, Ethel Spector Person, International Psycho-Analytical Association ( 1993) |
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On the History of the Psychoanalytic Movement by Sigmund Freud ( 1966)
Newly designed in a uniform format, each new paperback in the Standard Edition opens with a biographical essay on Freud's life and work along with a note on the individual volume by Peter Gay, Sterling Professor of History at Yale.
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The Origin And Development Of Psychoanalysis by Sigmund Freud ( 2004) |
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Origin and Development of Psychoanalysis by Sigmund Freud ( 1960)
These lectures were delivered by Freud at Clark University in 1910, only one year after his controversial psychoanalytic movement first received public recognition. Recorded as they were delivered in his invariably terse, lucid style, they are an indispensable first step to an understanding of Freud's basic theories of the way the mind works and how mental illness comes about and can be relieved.
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The Origins of Psycho-Analysis Letters to Wilhelm Filess, Drafts and Notes, 1887-1902 by Sigmund Freud ( 1954) |
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An Outline of Psycho-Analysis by Sigmund Freud ( 1989)
In June 1938, at eighty-two, Freud began writing this terse survey of the fundamentals of psychoanalysis. He marshals here the whole range of psychoanalytic theory and therapy in lucid prose and continues his open-mindedness to new departures, such as the potential of drug therapy. While this book remained unfinished, it covers the essentials of psychoanalysis.
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Paranoia y neurosis obsesiva/ Paranoia and Obsessive Neurosis Dos historiales clinicos/ Two Clinical Records by Sigmund Freud ( 2005) |
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A Phylogenetic Fantasy Overview of the Transference Neuroses by Sigmund Freud, Axel Hoffer, Peter T. Hoffer ( 1987)
An unfinished manuscript examines the classic transference neuroses and discusses the origins of the illnesses of neurotics and psychotics.
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The Problematic Self in Kierkegaard and Freud by Sigmund Freud, Sren Kierkegaard, J. Preston Cole ( 1971) |
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Psicoanalisis Del Arte by Sigmund Freud ( 1970) |
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Psicologia De Las Masas Mas Alla Del Principio Del Placer El Porvenir De Una Ilusion by Sigmund Freud ( 1969) |
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Psicopatologia De LA Vida Cotidiana by Sigmund Freud ( 1966) |
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Psikhologiia Bessoznatelnogo Sbornik Proizvedenii by Sigmund Freud ( 1989) |
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The Psychology of Love by Sigmund Freud ( 2007) |
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Psychopathology of Everday Life by Sigmund Freud ( 2003) |
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The Psychopathology of Everyday Life by Sigmund Freud ( 1991) |
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Question of Lay Analysis by Sigmund Freud ( 1969)
Freud believed that a medical education was not necessarily useful to, and might even impede, the psychoanalyst, but he met strenuous resistance among his followers, particularly in the United States. In "The Question of Lay Analysis" he set forth his views on this issue.The book makes its point energetically and in addition serves as an informal popularization of psychoanalytic ideas.
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The Schreber Case Sigmund Freud ; Translated by Andrew Webber, With an Introduction by Colin McCabe by Sigmund Freud ( 2003) |
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Schriften uber Kokain Sigmund Freud ; Aufgrund Der Vorarbeiten Von Paul Vogel Herausgegeben Und Eingeleitet Von Albrecht Hirschmuller by Sigmund Freud, Albrecht Hirschmuller ( 1996) |
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Sexual Enlightenment of Children by Sigmund Freud ( 1963) |
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Sexuality and the Psychology of Love by Philip Rieff, Sigmund Freud ( 1997)
A collection of papers on sexuality by Freud, assembled by Philip Rieff and presented chronologically. Covering a range of topics, the pieces illuminate Freud's thinking on the libido, homosexuality, object choice, and the psychology of women. Included are "A Child Is Being Beaten" and "Female Sexuality".
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Sexuality and the Psychology of Love
A collection of papers on sexuality by Freud, assembled by Philip Rieff and presented chronologically. Covering a range of topics, the pieces illuminate Freud's thinking on the libido, homosexuality, object choice, and the psychology of women. Included are "A Child Is Being Beaten" and "Female Sexuality".
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Sigmund Freud by Sigmund Freud, Giancarlo Ricci ( 1989) |
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Sigmund Freud E Il Mose Di Michelangelo Tra Psicoanalisi E Filosofia by Sigmund Freud, Francesco Saverio Trincia ( 2000) |
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Sigmund Freud Esszek by Sigmund Freud ( 1982) |
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Sigmund Freud Et Romain Rolland Correspondance 1923-1936 De La Sensation Oceanique Au Trouble Du Souvenir Sur L'Acropole by Sigmund Freud, Romain Rolland, Henri Vermorel, Madeleine Vermorel ( 1993) |
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Sigmund Freud and Lou Andreas-Salome Letters by Sigmund Freud, Lou Andreas-Salome ( 1985)
Freud's letters contain revealing commentaries on his working methods, his concept of narcissism, and his interpretation of Moses, and they treat the themes that preoccupied him in old age: death, religion, and war.
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Sigmund Freud and Lou Andreas-Salome; Letters by Sigmund Freud, Lou Andreas-Salome ( 1972) |
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Sigmund Freud, Jugendbriefe an Eduard Silberstein, 1871-1881 by Sigmund Freud ( 1989) |
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The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud by Sigmund Freud, Angela Richards, Scientific Literature Corporation ( 1953) |
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Studies in Parapsychology by Sigmund Freud ( 1963) |
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Studies on Hysteria by Sigmund Freud, James Strachey, Joseph Breuer ( 1982)
This cornerstone of modern psychoanalytic knowledge sets forth the cathartic method, in which patients' symptoms are cured as they recollect and express buried emotions.
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La Sublimation Les Sentiers De La Creation by Sigmund Freud, Didier Anzieu ( 1979) |
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Los Suenos by Sigmund Freud ( 1996) |
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La Symbolicite, Ou, Le Probleme De La Symbolisation Avec La Traduction De L'article De Freud, La (De)negation by Sigmund Freud, Angele Kremer-Marietti ( 1982) |
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Therapy and Technique by Sigmund Freud ( 1963) |
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Three Case Histories by Sigmund Freud, Philip Rieff ( 1997)
These histories reveal not only the working of the unconscious in paranoid and neurotic cases, but also the agility of Freud's own mind and his method for treating the disorders.
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Three Contributions to the Theory of Sex by Sigmund Freud, A.A. Brill ( 2001)
Freud's study examines sexual aberrations, infantile sexuality, and puberty.
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Three Contributions to the Theory of Sex by Sigmund Freud ( 2005) |
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Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality by Sigmund Freud ( 2000)
Paired with the INTERPRETATION OF DREAMS as being Freud's most significant works, THREE ESSAYS ON THE THEORY OF SEXUALITY explains the theory of sexual instinct and libido.
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Totem Et Tabou Interpretation Par La Psychanalyse De La Vie Sociale Des Peuples Primitifs by Sigmund Freud ( 1980) |
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Totem Y Tabu by Sigmund Freud ( 1967) |
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Totem and Taboo Resemblances Between the Psychic Lives of Savages and Neurotics by Sigmund Freud, A.A. Brill ( 2000)
Four essays on civilization: "The Horror of Incest," "Taboo and Emotional Ambivalence," "Animism, Magic and the Omnipotence of Thoughts," and "The Return of Totemism in Childhood." Freud explicates the presence of two "primitive" themes, totem and taboo, in "the religions, manners, and customs of civilized peoples today."
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Totem and Taboo Some Points of Agreement Between the Mental Lives of Savages and Neurotics by Sigmund Freud ( 1999) Routledge is now re-issuing this prestigious series of 204 volumes originally published between 1910 and 1965. The titles include works by key figures such asC.G. Jung, Sigmund Freud, Jean Piaget, Otto Rank, James Hillman, Erich Fromm, Karen Horney and Susan Isaacs. Each volume is available on its own, as part of a themed mini-set, or as part of a specially-priced 204-volume set. A brochure listing each title in the International Library of Psychology series is available upon request. |
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Totem and Taboo by Sigmund Freud ( 1960)
In this brilliant exploratory attempt to extend the analysis of the individual psyche to society and culture, Freud laid the lines for much of his late thought, and made a major contribution to the psychology of religion. Primitive societies and the individual, he found, mutually illuminate each other, and the psychology of primitive races bears marked resemblances to the psychology of neurotics. Basing his investigations on the finding of anthropologists, Freud came to the conclusion that totemism and its accompanying restriction of exogamy derive form the savage's dread of incest, and that taboo customs parallel closely the symptoms of compulsion neurosis. The killing of the 'primal father' and the consequent sense of guilt are seen as determining events both in the misty tribal pre-history of mankind, and in the suppressed wishes of individual men. Both totemism and taboo are thus held to have their roots in the Oedipus complex, which lies at the basis of all neurosis, and, as Freud argues, is also the origin of religion, ethics, society, and art.
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Totem and Taboo; Some Points of Agreement Between the Mental Lives of Savages and Neurotics. by Sigmund Freud ( 1962)
"Totem & Taboo" (1913), first published as a series of four articles between 1912 and 1913, is among Freud's most dazzling speculative texts. Adducing evidence from "primitive" tribes, neurotic women, child patients traversing the oedipal phase, and speculations by Charles Darwin, James G. Frazer, and other modern scholars, Freud attempts to define the moment that civilized life began. It stands as his most imaginative venture into the psychoanalysis of culture.
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Tres Ensayos Sobre Teoria Sexual by Sigmund Freud ( 1972) |
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Uber Sigmund Freud Portrat, Briefwechsel, Gedenkworte by Sigmund Freud, Stefan Zweig ( 1989) |
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The Uncanny by Sigmund Freud, Hugh Haughton, David McLintock ( 2003) |
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Vue D'ensemble Des Nevroses De Transfert Un Essai Metapsychologique by Sigmund Freud, Ilse Grubrich-Simitis, Patrick Lacoste ( 1986) |
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The Wisdom of Sigmund Freud by Sigmund Freud ( 2002) |
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Wit and Its Relation to the Unconscious by Sigmund Freud ( 1999) Routledge is now re-issuing this prestigious series of 204 volumes originally published between 1910 and 1965. The titles include works by key figures such asC.G. Jung, Sigmund Freud, Jean Piaget, Otto Rank, James Hillman, Erich Fromm, Karen Horney and Susan Isaacs. Each volume is available on its own, as part of a themed mini-set, or as part of a specially-priced 204-volume set. A brochure listing each title in the International Library of Psychology series is available upon request. |
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The Wolf-Man With The Case of the Wolf-Man by Sigmund Freud, Sergius Pankejeff, Ruth Mack Brunswick ( 1971) |
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The Wolf-Man and Sigmund Freud by Sigmund Freud, Sergius Pankejeff, Ruth Mack Brunswick ( 1972) |
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The Wolfman and Other Cases by Sigmund Freud, Louise Adey Huish ( 2003) |
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Woodrow Wilson A Psychological Study by Sigmund Freud, William C. Bullitt ( 1999) |
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Writings on Art and Literature by Sigmund Freud ( 1997) |
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El Yo Y El Ello Y Otros Escritos De Metapsicologia by Sigmund Freud ( 1973) |
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A Young Girl's Diary by Sigmund Freud ( 1973) |
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A Young Girl's Diary Prefaced With a Letter by Sigmund Freud by Sigmund Freud ( 2004) |
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Zigmund Freid, Psikhoanaliz I Russkaia Mysl by Sigmund Freud, V. M. Leibin ( 1994) |
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