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The life and work of Sigmund Freud continue to fascinate general and professional readers alike. Joel Whitebook here presents the first major biography of Freud since the last century, taking into account recent developments in psychoanalytic theory and practice, gender studies, philosophy, cultural theory, and more. Offering a radically new portrait of the creator of psychoanalysis, this book explores the man in all his complexity alongside an interpretation of his theories that cuts through the stereotypes that surround him. The development of Freud's thinking is addressed not only in the context of his personal life, but also in that of society and culture at large, while the impact of his thinking on subsequent issues of psychoanalysis, philosophy, and social theory is fully examined. Whitebook demonstrates that declarations of Freud's obsolescence are premature, and, with his clear and engaging style, brings this vivid figure to life in compelling and readable fashion.
Revista CES Psicología, 2008
Resumen: Este artículo se basa en una conferencia pública, realizada en mayo de 2006, en el auditorio de la universidad CES, como homenaje a los 150 años del nacimiento de Sigmund Freud. En él se plantea cómo lo inconsciente fue cubierto en la cultura ...
Sigmund Freud's impact on how we think, and how we think about how we think, has been enormous. Freud's psychoanalytical theory suggested new ways of understanding-amongst other things-love, hate, childhood, family relations, civilisation, religion, sexuality, fantasy and the conflicting emotions that make up our daily lives.Today we live in the shadow of Freud's innovative and controversial concepts. This short introduction to Freud's theories, contexts, influences and cultural effects is the ideal guide for readers interested in this thinker's continuing impact on contemporary culture and critical theory. The perfect companion to Freud's own work, this volume examines key ideas and key texts alongside the contexts from which they emerged. As well as offering a critical reading of Freud, the author highlights Freud's genius as a critical reader-of dreams, symptoms, slips of the tongue, myth, desire and culture. What emerges from this approach is a lucid examination of Freud's influence on contemporary literary and cultural theory.
British Journal of Psychotherapy, 2022
Abstract. Idealisation, both of individuals and of aspects of theory and clinical practice, has been a pervasive theme in psychoanalytic history. This paper makes use of Joel Whitebook's Freud: an intellectual biography (2017) to examine the impact of idealisation on Freud's own history, looking especially at three areas: his relations with women, his understanding of science, and his attitudes toward Jewishness and issues to do with ethical values and religion. It suggests that this has left a heritage of idealisation within the psychoanalytic profession that is now counter-productive, and that it is time for psychoanalytic thinking to enter further into dialogue with philosophy and other disciplines on a basis of mutual respect.
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND DIAGNOSTIC RESEARCH, 2021
Sigmund Freud has affected generations not only in the field of psychology but also in social scenarios, home life and popular culture. His views and theories have shaped our current concepts ranging from development to therapy. His beliefs, in his time, not only inspired his contemporaries with theirs’ but they also sparked controversies with other intellectuals. Despite being subject to criticism, his ideas have been and are still relevant. The terms introduced by him like the ‘Freudian slip’ and ‘denial’, have been incorporated into the present dictionaries and everyday life. Massively influential, his ideas, theories and his school of thought, psychoanalysis, continue to have a strong impact on psychology as well as psychotherapy even today.
"Analyze any human emotion, no matter how far it may be removed from the sphere of sex, and you are sure to discover somewhere the primal impulse, to which life owes its perpetuation." Sigmund Freud.
Australasian Psychiatry, 2006
To briefly describe my own development from medical student, through junior resident and psychiatry registrar and finally qualified psychiatrist, to feeling the need to undertake psychoanalytic training in order to grapple with the complexities of treatment of personality disorders.
The Palgrave Encyclopedia of the Possible, 2022
Indubitably, Sigmund Freud was one of last century's thinkers who contributed the most to redefining the scope of what is possible in the domain of human phenomena. He soundly charged at the picture that the western culture had formed of the human being, installing a field of inquiry and action whose potency stays current to this day. It is not an overstatement to say that psychoanalysis represented one of the most important epistemic torsions in the history of humankind, one whose implications have yet to be fully assimilated. The objective of this brief entry, concisely addressing a few key conceptual and methodological notions, is to show how the possibleimpossible axis built a bridge that enabled the Freudian foray into mind and culture, disrupting thus modern representations of what we have been, are and can become, as human beings.
Freud and his Discontents; an aetiology of psychoanalysis, 2021
The book, ‘Freud and his Discontents; an aetiology of psychoanalysis’ (ISBN 978-87-4303-717-0) is published, available in Denmark and Germany, and will be promoted in Britain, America, and Canada. A synopsis of the book is contained in the pdf along with text samples from the book. The book runs from the records of the Freud family in Pribor, the Jewish Enlightenment from a center not too far of in Tysmenitz which, influenced Freud’s parents and his early years. His first three years were actually spent with a Catholic nanny which left him relatively positive to the Catholic faith but his family's beliefs in Judaism were strongly rejected. This, plus his reports of some sexualization in Freud records, leaves him with early sexual attachments to his mother and anger against his father - his response to his family was therefore rooted in Oedipal dynamics. Sexual theories of the time, including Havelock Ellis, von Krafft-Ebbing, and Albert Moll also play a part in his theory of libido. He also seems to hold to such templates where two mothers are present and with birth confusion, he records two possible fathers. Freud’s Oedipal theory established at age three, occur simultaneously when Freud significantly lost his nanny and returned to his mother. These factors become evident in his works up to and including his last work, Moses and Monotheism. A significant amount of Freud’s works are discussed including, the psychosexual stages, Leonardo da Vinci, Totem and taboo, and the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society. In this last section, there are brief entries describing the main ideas of those who met with Freud in Vienna on Wednesdays. These are the ‘discontents’ where despite stormy meetings, some remained as Freudians, and some, like CG Jung and Alfred Adler, go their own way. We then have a ‘diaspora’ of psychologists which, gives rise to the modern world of psychology and its disciplines as we find it.
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