ABSTRACT

Freud’s collection of antiquities—his "old and dirty gods"—stood as silent witnesses to the early analysts’ paradoxical fascination and hostility toward religion. Pamela Cooper-White argues that antisemitism, reaching back centuries before the Holocaust, and the acute perspective from the margins that it engendered among the first analysts, stands at the very origins of psychoanalytic theory and practice.

The core insight of psychoanalytic thought— that there is always more beneath the surface appearances of reality, and that this "more" is among other things affective, memory-laden and psychological—cannot fail to have had something to do with the experiences of the first Jewish analysts in their position of marginality and oppression in Habsburg-Catholic Vienna of the 20th century. The book concludes with some parallels between the decades leading to the Holocaust and the current political situation in the U.S. and Europe, and their implications for psychoanalytic practice today.

Covering Pfister, Reik, Rank, and Spielrein as well as Freud, Cooper-White sets out how the first analysts’ position as Europe’s religious and racial "Other" shaped the development of psychoanalysis, and how these tensions continue to affect psychoanalysis today. Old and Dirty Gods will be of great interest to psychoanalysts as well as religious studies scholars.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

part I|72 pages

Religion and Freud’s Vienna circle

chapter 1|35 pages

“So, you have seen the gang now”

The Wednesday Night Psychological Society

chapter 2|35 pages

“Old and dirty gods”

Religion and Freud’s Vienna circle

part II|124 pages

The major contributors

chapter 3|32 pages

The analyst pastor

Oskar Pfister (1873–1956)

chapter 4|24 pages

“Enduring life without illusion”

Theodor Reik (1888–1969)

chapter 5|34 pages

Soul, will, and the search for immortality

Otto Rank (1884–1939)

chapter 6|32 pages

Death and resurrection

Sabina Spielrein (1885–1942)

part III|68 pages

The shadow of antisemitism

chapter 7|41 pages

“Father, don’t you see I’m burning?”

Antisemitism as total context

chapter 8|25 pages

“In the presence of the burning children”

Psychoanalysis, religion, and society—then and now