The young psychiatrist from Budapest had studied medicine in
Vienna, he had read "The Interpretation of Dreams," and now he was
about to meet its author. Seventeen years Sigmund Freud's junior,
Sandor Ferenczi (1873-1933) sent off a note anticipating the
pleasure of the older man's acquaintance--thus beginning a
correspondence that would flourish over the next twenty-five years,
and that today provides a living record of some of the most
important insights and developments of psychoanalysis, worked out
through the course of a deep and profoundly complicated
friendship.
This volume opens in January of 1908 and closes on the eve of
World War I. Letter by letter, a "fellowship of life, thoughts, and
interests" as Freud came to describe it, unfolds here as a
passionate exchange of ideas and theories. Ferenczi's contribution
to psychoanalysis was, Freud said, "pure gold," and many of the
younger man's notions and concepts, proposed in these letters,
later made their way into Freud's works on homosexuality, paranoia,
trauma, transference, and other topics. To the two men's mutual
scientific interests others were soon added, and their
correspondence expanded in richness and complexity as Ferenczi
attempted to work out his personal and professional conflicts under
the direction of his devoted and sometimes critical elder
colleague.
Here is Ferenczi's love for Elma, his analysand and the
daughter of his mistress, his anguish over his matrimonial
intentions, his soliciting of Freud's help in sorting out this
emotional tangle--a situation that would eventually lead to
Ferenczi's own analysis with Freud. Here is Freud's unraveling
relationship with Jung, documented through a heated discussion of
the events leading up to the final break. Amid these weighty
matters of heart and mind, among the psychoanalytic theorizing and
playful speculation, we also find the lighter stuff of life, the
talk of travel plans and antiquities, gossip about friends and
family. Unparalleled in their wealth of personal and scientific
detail, these letters give us an intimate picture of psychoanalytic
theory being made in the midst of an extraordinary friendship.
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