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Freud, V. 2 - Appraisals and Reappraisals (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,386
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Freud, V. 2 - Appraisals and Reappraisals (Hardcover)
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Volume 2 of the Freud: Appraisals and Reappraisals series bears out
the promise of the acclaimed premier volume, a volume whose essays
"breathe new life into the study of Freud," embodying research that
"appears to be impeccable in every case" (International Review of
Psychoanalysis). It begins with Peter Homan's detailed
reeexamination of the period 1906-1914 in Freud's life. Looking to
Freud's relationahips with Jung as the central event of the period,
he finds in Freud's idealization and subsequent de-idealization of
Jung a psychological motif that gains recurrent expression in
Freud's later writings and personal relationships. Richard Geha
offers a provocative protrait of Freud as a "fictionalist."
Anchoring his exegesis in Freud's famous case of the Wolf Man, he
argues that the yield of Freud's clinical inquiries,
epistemologically, is a species of the fictionalism of Friedrich
Nietzsche and Hans Vaihinger. But, pursuing the argument, Geha goes
on to advance little-noted biographical evidence that Freud
understood himself to be an artist whose clinical productions were
ultimately artistic. Finally, Patricia Herzog organizes and
interprets Freud's seemingly conflicting remarks about philosophy
and philosophers en route to the claim that the long-held belief
that Freud was an "anti-philosopher" is a myth. In fact, she
claims, "Freud was in no doubt as to the philosophical nature of
his goal." In an introductory essay titled "Pathways to Freud's
Identity," editor Paul E. Stepansky brings together the essays of
Homans, Geha, and Herzog as complementary inquiries into Freud's
putative self-understanding and, to that extent, as reconstructive,
historical continuations of the self-analysis methodically begun by
Freud in the late 1890s. "Each contributor," writes Stepansky, "in
his or her own way, seeks to understand Freud better in the spirit
in which Freud might have better understood himself. Together, the
contributors offer vistas to an enlarged self-analytic
sensibility."
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