ABSTRACT

First published in 1947, with a second edition in 1950, the original blurb reads: 'This is an illuminating description of a complete Freudian analysis of a single case. From the first interview to the last the reader’s attention is engrossed with the almost-normal personality of the individual who is being analysed. We see his thoughts, philosophy, and emotions gradually unfolding under the application of analytical technique (lightly explained in the second chapter), until – and this is where the book is such a tremendous advance upon the psychological novel – the very springs and mechanisms of his psychic pattern and emotional structure are abundantly and lucidly revealed. We see and understand the hidden depths of the nature of the human mind, and obtain introductory insight not only into normal mental functioning, but into almost all its psychopathic aberrations including frigidity, impotence, love, hate, hysteria, obsessions, and even paranoia and schizophrenia – all in minor degrees an integral part of normality.

In spite of this the book is light reading and, though particularly instructive to doctor and professional psychologist, understandable to the average intelligent layman.'

This book is a re-issue originally published in 1950. The language used is a reflection of its era and no offence is meant by the Publishers to any reader by this re-publication.

part Book One|92 pages

Father

chapter Chapter I|8 pages

The First Interview

chapter Chapter II|12 pages

A Glimpse of Technique

chapter Chapter III|9 pages

The First Analytical Sessions

chapter Chapter IV|11 pages

The Beginning of Transference

chapter Chapter V|13 pages

Regression to Infancy

chapter Chapter VI|15 pages

The Father-Fixation

(Its Emergence and its Working Through)

chapter Chapter VII|10 pages

The Almighty Father

part Book Two|86 pages

Mother

chapter Chapter X|9 pages

Father Gives Place to Mother

chapter Chapter XI|6 pages

Heterosexual Anxiety and Resistance

chapter Chapter XII|9 pages

The Problem of Anxiety

chapter Chapter XIII|9 pages

The Psychology of Accidents

chapter Chapter XIV|6 pages

Analysis and Money

chapter Chapter XV|11 pages

The Self Sufficiency of the Anal Character

chapter Chapter XVI|11 pages

Transference Resistance—A Session

chapter Chapter XVII|13 pages

The Mother-Image

part Book Three|67 pages

Son

chapter Chapter XVIII|12 pages

The Climax

chapter Chapter XIX|8 pages

He has Prospects of Inheriting the Mother-Image

chapter Chapter XX|13 pages

Analysis of the Transference

chapter Chapter XXI|9 pages

The Relief of Mother-Fixation

chapter Chapter XXII|9 pages

The Final Stage

chapter Chapter XXIII|14 pages

Theoretical Review