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The Reception of Psychoanalysis in Germany
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 June 2009
Extract
This essay deals mainly with the factors influencing the reception of psychoanalysis in Germany. However, I will preface my discussion with two brief sections describing the events of the reception. Please note that as used here, Germany refers specifically to the state, and not to the German-speaking areas of central Europe.
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- The Cultural Diffusion of Freudian Thought
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- Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1982
References
1 This article is intended to be a short, general essay. Readers wishing fuller evidence or illustration of particular points are referred to my book, Freud in Germany: Revolution and Reaction in Science, 1893–1907 (New York: International Universities Press, 1977).Google Scholar
2 For example, Hermann Oppenheim, the neurologist, included Freud's name among those who had contributed important information on neurasthenia, hysteria, and psychotherapy. Willy Hellpach, the psychiatrist, called Freud one of the classicists of the psychology of hysteria. Albert Moll, psychiatrist and sexologist, listed Freud as one of a group of prominent hypnotherapists. For the complete lists, see Oppenheim, Hermann, Zur Prognose und Therapie der schweren Neurosen, Sammlung zwangloser Abhandlungen aus dem Gebiete der Nervenund Geisteskrankheiten (Halle a. S.: Marhold, 1902), vol. III, pt. 8, p. 4Google Scholar; Hellpach, Willy, Grundlinien einer Psychologie der Hysterie (Leipzig: Engelmann, 1904), ivGoogle Scholar; Moll, Albert, Der Hypnotismus: Mit Einschluss der Hauptpunkte der Psychotherapie und des Okkultismus, 4th ed. (Berlin: Fischer's Medicinische Buchhandlung, 1907), 126.Google Scholar
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