Fr. 210.00

Occultism and the Origins of Psychoanalysis - Freud, Ferenczi and the Challenge of Thought Transference

English · Hardback

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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.


List of contents

Introduction
Stefano Bolognini
Prologue: a result of character: the cocaine, this magical substance
1. Vienna, Porta Orientis of the Unconscious
The force of suggestion: the "wonderful somnambulists"
Hypnosis
Vienna, laboratory of modernity
2. The Young Freud
A passionate young researcher into nature
First love
Martha and Bertha: the languages of passion
3. The Lesson of Jean Martin Charcot
At the Salpêtrière
The apparatus of language
The magic of words
4. The lesson of Josef Breuer and the "descent to the mothers"
Studies on hysteria
A difficult separation: not all debts can be paid
A foundation myth: a false pregnancy and a cure with a defect.
5. Sigmund Freud’s lesson
The discovery of a false connection
Irma’s throat and the feminine at the origin of psychoanalysis.
Dream as desire
6. Fliess and the invention of psychoanalysis
A secret correspondence
My friend in Berlin
Freud’s heart trouble
7. The discovery of infantile sexuality
Self-analysis and the writing cure
Cherchez la femme: the case of Emma Eckstein
8. Original thought requires a rupture
The "reader of thoughts"
The accusation of plagiarism
A future in the image of the past: predestination and superstition
9. Occultism made in the USA
Spiritualism
Medium, media, and "mental telegraphy"
First hypotheses about the unconscious
10 Jung, spiritualism, and countertransference: the world of the dead
Jung, Poltergeist phenomena, and séances
The arrival at Burghölzli
First visit to Vienna
Easter 1909: Jung’s spiritual complex and Sabina
The dangerous fascination of the "beautiful Jewess"
11. Ferenczi, the unclassifiable
The sultan and his "clairvoyant"
A psychoanalyst "of a restless mind"
Ferenczi and the hidden treasure of Spiritualism
The encounter with Freud: a postponed transferential appointment
12. A journey to America
Three men and an eventful, mutually analytic crossing: the outward journey…
… and back again
13. The Danaan gift
The clairvoyant who reads Ferenczi’s mind
The patient who reads Ferenczi’s mind
The Palermo incident, or the interpretation of paranoia
The psychic work of the clairvoyant: two unfulfilled prophecies
14. An epistolary novel
Ferenczi and incestuous countertransferential storms: from mother to daughter
What is still missing is the fatherly blessing: fatefulness and Oedipal coincidences
Elma Pàlos, fragment of the analysis of a seduction
The open wound in Ferenczi’s heart, a source of creativity
15. The Saturday goy: getting to know Dr Jones
The Welsh liar
Difficult beginnings
Freud’s first pupil from Britain
Dr Jones’s stethoscope: rationalisation and censorship of excess countertransference
A prescribed training analysis in Budapest
16. The intergenerational transmission of psychoanalysis
Love and death: the three women of the three pupils
"If you go to women, don't forget the whip"
At school with Freud: the transmission of psychoanalysis
17. The secret committee
The transformations and the desertion of Jung
A missed meeting: the "Kreuzlingen gesture"
The Committee: the Männerbund and the defence of the "Cause" (Die Sache)
Totem and taboo: unconscious intelligence and intergenerational transmission of thought
18. 1913 - the year before the war
The last congress with Jung
A black tide of occultism
The question of telepathy
The dialogues of the unconscious
Epilogue: a fortune-teller visits Freud in Berggasse
Correspondence
Index

About the author

Maria Pierri is a psychiatrist and child neuropsychiatrist, formerly researcher and adjunct professor at the Psychiatric Clinic, Medical School, University of Padua. She is a training analyst of the Italian Psychoanalytical Society and International Psychoanalytical Association and member of the editorial board of the Rivista di Psicoanalisi.

Summary

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.

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