Daniel Benveniste
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The Interwoven Lives of Sigmund, Anna and W. Ernest Freud: Three Generations of Psychoanalysis
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published
2014
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2 editions
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Anna Freud in the Hampstead Clinic: Letters to Humberto Nágera
by
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published
2015
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2 editions
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“The end of the war brought the closing of the borders cutting off Austria’s coal supply from Czechoslovakia, leaving the Austrians at peace but hungry, cold, and vulnerable to tuberculosis and a virulent form of influenza (Grosskurth, 1991, p. 82). Writer Stefan Zweig described postwar Vienna as “an uncertain, gray, and lifeless shadow of the former imperial monarchy” (qtd. in Gay, 1988, p. 380).”
― The Interwoven Lives of Sigmund, Anna and W. Ernest Freud: Three Generations of Psychoanalysis
― The Interwoven Lives of Sigmund, Anna and W. Ernest Freud: Three Generations of Psychoanalysis
“Freud struck a philosophical note on January 25 when he wrote to Max of the “senseless, brutal act of fate, which has robbed us of our Sophie . . . One must bow one’s head under the blow, as a helpless, poor human being with whom higher powers are playing.”
― The Interwoven Lives of Sigmund, Anna and W. Ernest Freud: Three Generations of Psychoanalysis
― The Interwoven Lives of Sigmund, Anna and W. Ernest Freud: Three Generations of Psychoanalysis
“Long-past ages have a great and often puzzling attraction for men’s imagination. Whenever they are dissatisfied with their present surroundings—and this happens often enough—they turn back to the past and hope that they will now be able to prove the truth of the inextinguishable dream of a golden age. They are probably still under the spell of their childhood, which is presented to them by their not impartial memory as a time of uninterrupted bliss. —Sigmund Freud, “Moses and Monotheism”
― The Interwoven Lives of Sigmund, Anna and W. Ernest Freud: Three Generations of Psychoanalysis
― The Interwoven Lives of Sigmund, Anna and W. Ernest Freud: Three Generations of Psychoanalysis
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