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Sexuality and the Psychology of Love

Sexuality and the Psychology of Love
by Sigmund Freud, Philip Rieff (Introduction)

 

Sigmund Freud (1856 - 1939)

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Freud: Darkness in the Midst of Vision--An Analytical Biography

Names Index:
A
B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

Drawing the Dream of the Wolves : Homosexuality, Interpretation, and Freud's 'Wolf Man' (Theories of Representation and Difference)Drawing the Dream of the Wolves : Homosexuality, Interpretation, and Freud's 'Wolf Man' by Whitney Davis

Davis argues that the visual dimension of Freud's writing is crucial to understanding its structure and significance. He offers a new and challenging reading of Freud's case study of Serge Pankejeff, the "Wolf Man." Much of the analysis revolved around Pankejeff's childhood dream of wolves and a drawing of this dream he made for Freud.

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Does the Woman Exist? : From Freud's Hysteria to Lacan's FeminineDoes the Woman Exist? : From Freud's Hysteria to Lacan's Feminine by Paul Verhaeghe, Marc Du Ry (Translator)

The short answer is no; woman does not exist.
But it is the long answer, the one Paul Verhaeghe gives in this important book, that will dazzle you. By giving psychoanalysis's weighty pronouncement the detailed attention it deserves, he conclusively demonstrates not only how thoroughly it informs all psychoanalytic thouht, but how difficult it was even for Freud and Lacan to discern and then face up to its full, radical import. Suggesting that we have not yet met the full conceptual challenge posed by the woman's inexistence, Verhaeghe clears the way for a whole new era of research in the feminine. This book will excite and ispire all those interested in the question of sexual difference. -Joan Copjec.

It is effectively as if we were all waiting for a book like Verhaeghe's "Does the Woman Exist?" - this book comes as a miraculous answer to the confusions surrounding Freud's and Lacan's theory of feminine sexuality. Verhaeghe clearly demonstrates how Lacan avoided both the scylla of patriarchal logic as well as the Charybdis of the fashionable feminist dismissal of Lacan as phallogocentrist. After reading this book, it should be clear that, far from being outdated, psychoanalytic approach to feminine sexuality enables us to find our way in the confusions and deadlocks of our allegedly permissive postmodern society. On top of it, Verhaeghe combines strict theoretical approach with clinical references and thus avoids the usual culturalist trap. A must for anyone who wants to grasp what psychoanalysis has to say today! -Slavoj Zizek

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Sigmund Freud and the Freud Archives

This collection of links points to Internet resources related to Sigmund Freud and his works. Included in this collection are libraries, museums, and biographical materials, as well as materials in the Brill Library archives.

  

Freud Museum

The Freud Museum, at 20 Maresfield Gardens in Hampstead, was the home of Sigmund Freud and his family when they escaped Nazi annexation of Austria in 1938. It remained the family home until Anna Freud, the youngest daughter, died in 1982. The centrepiece of the museum is Freud's library and study, preserved just as it was during his lifetime.

It contains Freud's remarkable collection of antiquities: Egyptian; Greek; Roman and Oriental. Almost two thousand items fill cabinets and are ranged on every surface. There are rows of ancient figures on the desk where Freud wrote until the early hours of the morning. The walls are lined with shelves containing Freud's large library of reference books...

  

Freud Archives at the Freud Museum

The Freud Museum houses the possessions Freud brought with him to London at his emigration in 1938, including his library and personal papers. It also contains Anna Freud's papers. The present archive catalogue lists letters, documents and photos. 

The archive consists primarily of copies: most original documents were transferred to Washington to form the Sigmund Freud Archives in the Library of Congress. At present the archive catalogue lists around 6,000 letters to and from Freud, 1,500 others and over 1,000 miscellaneous documents.  The Freud Museum archive continues to receive material from various sources and the catalogue will continue to be updated at intervals. 

  

What did Freud have to Say about Homosexuality?

Submitted by Jack Drescher, American Psychoanalytic Foundation

Excerpt:

For those who don't know, Freud among other professional dignitaries signed a statement, in 1930, which called for the repeal of the law penalizing homosexual relations between "consenting adult males..."

Abelove, H. (1985), Freud, male homosexuality, and the Americans. In The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader, ed. H. Abelove, M.A. Barale, & D. Halperin. New York: Routledge, 1993, pp. 381-393.

 

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Names Index:
A
B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

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