The history of the psychoanalytic movement

In The History of the Psychoanalytic Movement, Sigmund Freud offers both a retrospective account of psychoanalysis's emergence and a polemical defense of its central doctrines. The book traces the development of key concepts—repression, the unconscious, infantile sexuality, and dream interpretation—while also distinguishing Freud's position from dissenting figures such as Adler and Jung. Written in a lucid yet combative prose, it occupies a crucial place in the intellectual history of early twentieth-century Europe, where psychology, medicine, and cultural criticism were being radically reconfigured. Freud, the Viennese neurologist who founded psychoanalysis, wrote from within the controversies that his theories provoked. His clinical work with hysteria, his collaboration with Josef Breuer, and his sustained self-analysis all informed the convictions expressed here. The text reflects not only Freud's scientific ambitions but also his desire to secure the integrity of a movement increasingly threatened, in his view, by revision and misinterpretation. This book is especially valuable for readers seeking a primary-source understanding of how psychoanalysis defined itself as both method and movement. It will reward students of psychology, intellectual history, and modern thought, offering a concise yet revealing guide to Freud's ideas, rivalries, and enduring cultural significance.

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In The History of the Psychoanalytic Movement, Sigmund Freud offers both a retrospective account of psychoanalysis's emergence and a polemical defense of its central doctrines. The book traces the development of key concepts—repression, the unconscious, infantile sexuality, and dream interpretation—while also distinguishing Freud's position from dissenting figures such as Adler and Jung. Written in a lucid yet combative prose, it occupies a crucial place in the intellectual history of early twentieth-century Europe, where psychology, medicine, and cultural criticism were being radically reconfigured. Freud, the Viennese neurologist who founded psychoanalysis, wrote from within the controversies that his theories provoked. His clinical work with hysteria, his collaboration with Josef Breuer, and his sustained self-analysis all informed the convictions expressed here. The text reflects not only Freud's scientific ambitions but also his desire to secure the integrity of a movement increasingly threatened, in his view, by revision and misinterpretation. This book is especially valuable for readers seeking a primary-source understanding of how psychoanalysis defined itself as both method and movement. It will reward students of psychology, intellectual history, and modern thought, offering a concise yet revealing guide to Freud's ideas, rivalries, and enduring cultural significance.

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