ABSTRACT

Occultism and the Origins of Psychoanalysis traces the origins of key psychoanalytic ideas back to their roots in hypnosis and the occult.

Maria Pierri follows Freud’s early interest in "thought-transmission," now known as telepathy. Freud’s private investigations led to discussions with other leading figures like Carl Jung and Sándor Ferenczi, with whom he held a "dialogue of the unconsciouses." Freud’s and Ferenczi’s work assessed how fortune tellers could read the past from a client, inspiring their investigations into countertransference, the analytic relationship, unconscious communication, and mother-infant relationality. Both Freud and Ferenczi tried in different ways to come close to understanding the infant’s occult link with the mother and their secret primal language: their research on thought transference may be identified as a matrix of the developments of current psychoanalysis. Pierri clearly links modern psychoanalytic practice with Freud’s interests in the occult using primary sources, some of which have never previously been published in English.

Occultism and the Origins of Psychoanalysis will be of great interest to psychoanalysts in practice and in training, as well as academics and scholars of Freudian ideas, psychoanalytic theory, the history of psychology, and the occult. It is complemented by Sigmund Freud and The Forsyth Case: Coincidences and Thought-Transmission in Psychoanalysis.

chapter |4 pages

Prologue

A result of character: the cocaine, this magical substance

chapter Chapter 1|8 pages

Vienna, Porta Orientis of the unconscious

chapter Chapter 2|12 pages

The young Freud

chapter Chapter 3|9 pages

The lesson of Jean Martin Charcot

chapter Chapter 5|12 pages

Sigmund Freud's lesson

chapter Chapter 6|10 pages

Fliess and the invention of psychoanalysis

chapter Chapter 7|11 pages

The discovery of infantile sexuality

chapter Chapter 8|10 pages

Original thought requires a rupture

chapter Chapter 9|16 pages

Occultism made in the USA

chapter Chapter 10|19 pages

Jung, spiritualism and countertransference

The world of the dead

chapter Chapter 11|10 pages

Ferenczi, the unclassifiable

chapter Chapter 12|16 pages

A journey to America

chapter Chapter 13|22 pages

The Danaan gift

chapter Chapter 14|13 pages

An epistolary novel

chapter Chapter 15|16 pages

The Saturday goy

Getting to know Dr Jones

chapter Chapter 16|13 pages

The intergenerational transmission of psychoanalysis

chapter Chapter 17|13 pages

The secret committee

chapter Chapter 18|14 pages

1913 – the year before the war