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Fritz Morgenthaler was a crucial figure in the return of
psychoanalysis to post-Nazi Central Europe. An inspiring clinician
and teacher to the New Left generation of 1968, he was the first
European psychoanalyst since Freud to declare that homosexuality is
not, indeed never, a pathology, and in Technik, developed
revolutionary ideas for transforming clinical technique. On the
Dialectics of Psychoanalytic Practice offers the first publication
in English of this psychoanalytic, counterculture classic. Those
who first picked up Technik encountered it at a historical moment
when Marxist psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich, popular New Left cultural
critic Klaus Theweleit, and the texts of the Frankfurt School were
already required reading. While not a political text in the same
direct way, Morgenthaler's Technik nonetheless shared many of their
preoccupations and conclusions about human nature. It was read as
technical guidance for psychoanalysts, but also as a manifesto
dedicated to the problem of how it might be possible genuinely to
live a postfascist, and nonfascist, existence. Morgenthaler was a
protorelationalist who recombined the traditions of ego and self
psychology as he retained a commitment to drive theory. Here Dagmar
Herzog makes his work available to a new generation of analysts,
providing essential source material, annotations, and
groundbreaking analysis of the continued importance of the work for
historians and therapeutic practitioners alike. On the Dialectics
of Psychoanalytic Practice will interest practicing clinicians as
well as intellectual historians and cultural studies scholars
seeking to understand the return of psychoanalysis to post-Nazi
Central Europe.
Fritz Morgenthaler was a crucial figure in the return of
psychoanalysis to post-Nazi Central Europe. An inspiring clinician
and teacher to the New Left generation of 1968, he was the first
European psychoanalyst since Freud to declare that homosexuality is
not, indeed never, a pathology, and in Technik, developed
revolutionary ideas for transforming clinical technique. On the
Dialectics of Psychoanalytic Practice offers the first publication
in English of this psychoanalytic, counterculture classic. Those
who first picked up Technik encountered it at a historical moment
when Marxist psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich, popular New Left cultural
critic Klaus Theweleit, and the texts of the Frankfurt School were
already required reading. While not a political text in the same
direct way, Morgenthaler's Technik nonetheless shared many of their
preoccupations and conclusions about human nature. It was read as
technical guidance for psychoanalysts, but also as a manifesto
dedicated to the problem of how it might be possible genuinely to
live a postfascist, and nonfascist, existence. Morgenthaler was a
protorelationalist who recombined the traditions of ego and self
psychology as he retained a commitment to drive theory. Here Dagmar
Herzog makes his work available to a new generation of analysts,
providing essential source material, annotations, and
groundbreaking analysis of the continued importance of the work for
historians and therapeutic practitioners alike. On the Dialectics
of Psychoanalytic Practice will interest practicing clinicians as
well as intellectual historians and cultural studies scholars
seeking to understand the return of psychoanalysis to post-Nazi
Central Europe.
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