Psychoanalysis : the first ten years : 1888-1898 / Walter A. Stewart.
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Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Signatura topográfica | Estado | Código de barras | |
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Universidad del Museo Social Argentino | CG 159.964.26FREUD=111 ST849 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) | Disponible | cg004802 |
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CG 159.964.26FREUD L314 Vida y muerte en psicoanálisis / | CG 159.964.26FREUD S572 Interpretación freudiana y psicoanálisis / | CG 159.964.26FREUD SA194 Estudio sobre "introducción al narcisismo" de Sigmund Freud / | CG 159.964.26FREUD=111 ST849 Psychoanalysis : the first ten years : 1888-1898 / | CG 159.964.26JUNG H174 La teoría analítica de la personalidad : Jung / | CG 159.964.26JUNG H174 ej. 2 La teoría analítica de la personalidad : Jung / | CG 159.964.26JUNG P964 La psicología de C. G. Jung y su significación social / |
1. The setting – Freud’s early analytic concepts.
2. First observations.
3. Early views on sexuality – The actual neurosis.
4. Early views on sexuality – The neuropsychoses of defense.
5. The economic formulations.
6. Affects.
7. Early metapsychology. Bibliography. Index.
This was a new assessment of Freud’s most creative years and the formative period in psychoanalysis and was the first book to attempt a systematic presentation of Freud’s early ideas, relating them to his later work and to contemporary psychoanalysis. During the years 1888-1898 Freud published 15 papers and one book. In addition many of his ideas were formulated in a series of letters and drafts that he wrote to Dr Wilhelm Fliess. This material provided new insights into the nature of Freud’s creative genius and gave new meaning to his published works.
Psychoanalysis: The First Ten Years reviews these early papers, drafts and letters, and describes tentative formulations that, in spite of their value, were not developed further because of lack of time or a shift in interest. As Dr Stewart observes, ‘the study of this aspect of Freud’s work is perhaps the most exciting. Freud’s creativity in these years was remarkable. The ideas he discarded in this short period of time would, for a less gifted person, have been a full life’s work of which he could have been proud.’
There is a good deal of historical and literary interest in his account of Freud’s relationships with Fliess, Breuer and others, but the core of the book is the critical assessment and systematic presentation of Freud’s early major insights, which dramatically reveal a creative genius in the process of discovery.