ABSTRACT

In this volume Paul Roazen examines different national responses to Freud and the beginnings of psychoanalysis. He examines Freud's work in the contexts of law, society, and class, as well as other forms of psychology.

Encountering Freud includes a brilliant essay on Freud and the question of psychoanalysis' contribution to radical thought, in contrast to the conservative tradition. Roazen takes up the extravagant claims of Marcuse and Reich, and sees the risks of then overglamorization of the beginnings of psychoanalysis as a profession. Roazen views the legacies of Harry Stack Sullivan, Helene Deutsch, and Erik H. Erikson as less rich because their work conformed to the social status quo. He sees Freud's inability to avoid an ambiguous outcome as a lack of concern with normality and a refusal to own up to the wide variety of psychological solutions he found both therapeutically tolerable and humanly desirable.

Roazen concludes with a series of explorations on the dichotomies Freud left behind: clinical discoveries versus philosophical standpoints; the relationship of normality to nihilism; and a defense of a therapeutic setting based on trained specialists versus a therapeutic approach encouraging self-expression. This is a volume that utilizes a sharp focus on Freud and his followers and dissenters to explore the question of political psychology at one end and psych-history at the other end of analysis.

chapter 1|16 pages

The Beginnings of Psychoanalysis

chapter 2|18 pages

The Old World

chapter 3|24 pages

America

chapter 4|14 pages

Letter Writing

chapter 5|12 pages

Insanity and the Law

chapter 6|23 pages

The Tausk Problem

chapter 7|15 pages

Marxism

chapter 8|22 pages

Ego Psychology

chapter 9|19 pages

Biography

chapter 10|16 pages

Brief Lives

chapter 11|12 pages

Heretics

chapter 12|19 pages

Loyalism

chapter 13|24 pages

Political Psychology

chapter 14|20 pages

Psychohistory

chapter 15|26 pages

Sages

chapter 16|16 pages

Conclusion