ABSTRACT

Freud's development of psychoanalysis is one of the great fault lines of twentieth-century cultural history. The field as such provides one of the great professional dramas of our time: a classic struggle between a new, vital idea and the ignorance, prejudice and refusal that so often attend major breakthroughs and innovations. Helen Puner's biography is far more than a professional appreciation. It is the story of a complex, by no means flawless individual, whose personal characteristics helped sow the seeds of controversy as well as ultimately establish a new field. Upon its initial appearance, the Herald Tribune identified the book as "the first authoritative and profoundly perceptive biography of the man who more than any other has shaped the thinking of the Western World." It was summarized as a "brilliant performance, done without fear."Puner did precisely what irritated Freud most: probe the sources, social no less than personal, religious no less than scientific, that made Freud such a towering figure. Dorothy Canfield caught the spirit of this work when she noted that in this book, we see Freud "as we never saw him before, as most of us never knew he was, a rigidly virtuous, deeply troubled, upright, dutiful Jewish son, husband and father. We see him tracing the significance of clues he hit upon in the practice of medicine, and then fit these clues into the bewildering mastery of human behavior."In his Foreword, Erich Fromm indicates that Puner looks at Freud with genuine admiration, but without idolatry. "She understands his own psychological problems and has a full appreciation of the pseudo-religious nature of the movement which he created." And the late Ernest Becker, in The Denial of Death, seconded this estimate by calling the Helen Walker Puner effort "a brilliant critical biography." This new edition contains a new introduction by Paul Roazen; with this, and the appreciation of the author by her husband, Samuel Puner, we can better locate the author of the book as well as the famous object of her analysis.

chapter 1|13 pages

Prophecies and Premonitions

chapter 2|11 pages

The New Home

chapter 3|10 pages

A Boy in Vienna

chapter 4|12 pages

The Choice of a Path

chapter 5|12 pages

Paris in the Spring

chapter 6|18 pages

La Chose Genitale

chapter 7|21 pages

The Stuff of Dreams

chapter 8|16 pages

See How It Grows

chapter 9|20 pages

See How It Splits

chapter 10|25 pages

Husband and Two Fathers

chapter 11|13 pages

War Outside, War Inside

chapter 12|18 pages

Old Man of the Horde

chapter 13|19 pages

Day to Day

chapter 14|21 pages

The Passionate Will

chapter 15|25 pages

The Larger World of Psychoanalysis

chapter 16|9 pages

Hans im Glueck