ABSTRACT

Located at the crossroads of psychoanalysis and history, this book investigates the ambiguous concept of trauma and the changes to its formulation and use between the years 1866 and 1939. 

Luis Sanfelippo introduces the original conceptions of trauma outlined by Sigmund Freud, Pierre Janet and their contemporaries, before investigating how the meaning of this concept was influenced and informed by large-scale historical events like the First World War. Trauma, Psychoanalysis and History investigates the multiple problems linked to this fetishised category and how it has developed over time. Sanfelippo also considers the historiographical and conceptual problems raised by the application of trauma to collective memory and contemporary history, reflecting on what this means for historiography. 

Trauma, Psychoanalysis and History will be of great interest to students in training for psychotherapy and mental health practice, trained psychoanalysts, as well as academics and scholars of psychoanalytic studies, the history of psychology, trauma studies and modern history. 

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 1|43 pages

Mechanical Trauma and Psychical Trauma

Railway Accidents and Hysteria (1866–1889)

chapter Chapter 2|46 pages

Trauma and Memory

The Janet-Freud Debate, 1889–1895/1913–1914 1

chapter Chapter 3|49 pages

Sexual Cause and Traumatic Testimonies

The Versions of the Neurotica and Its Abandonment (1896–1933)

chapter Chapter 5|23 pages

On Collective Traumas

The Persistence and Transmission of Past Experiences (1913 and 1939)

chapter |18 pages

Conclusions