Psychoanalysis under Nazi occupation : the origins, impact and influence of the Berlin institute. / Laura Sokolowsky
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Cover -- Endorsements -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of tables -- Acknowledgements -- Series preface -- List of acronyms used -- Introduction -- Freud's warning regarding therapy -- On the treatment of neuroses in free clinics -- The incidence of war neuroses -- The turning point of Budapest -- PART I: Berlin at the centre of the psychoanalytic movement -- 1. The golden age of the Berlin Institute -- Weimar: a democratic interval for psychoanalysis -- Made in Berlin -- The Weimar Republic and the psychoanalysts -- Berlin, crossroads of expectations -- The group of pioneers -- A knot between therapeutics, training and teaching -- 2. Asserting the authority of psychoanalysis -- Enlarging the field of psychoanalytic action -- Preserving true psychoanalysis -- The use of free treatment -- The desire to be an authority -- A strong proponent of analysis -- Friend Eitingon -- 3. The original 1930 report -- Handling public opinion -- Ernst Simmel and the psychoanalytical hospital -- The Fenichel report -- The old dragon and the criminal -- Make the patient understand that he is defending himself -- PART II: The Institute and the rise of Nazism -- 4. Institute, training and society -- A Freudian objection to the prevention of neuroses -- The social extension in question -- Uses of the initial consultation -- The case of Josephine Dellisch -- New guidelines for training -- The novitiate of the analyst -- 5. Psychoanalysis versus psychotherapy -- The systematisation of the curriculum -- The practical training at the polyclinic -- Sigmund Freud's anxiety -- The guardianship of psychoanalysis -- Jones's mission to Berlin -- 6. The end of an experiment -- The refusal of the political -- The argument for independence -- 'All kinds of things about Berlin that you should know and that frighten me'.
A simple replacement of people? -- The tribulations of a nonentity -- Berlin is lost -- 7. Conclusion -- Standards and training of the psychoanalyst -- The regulation of didactic analysis -- Lacan's refusal of standards -- Bibliography -- Index.
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