1st Edition

Collected Psychoanalytic Works of Sabina Spielrein - SET

578 Pages
by Routledge

578 Pages
by Routledge

Vol 1: This is the first of two volumes of totally new English translations of all the known published psychoanalytic works of Sabina Spielrein, an important early proponent of psychoanalysis—and in particular of child psychoanalysis—who anticipated much of its later development. This volume includes translations of Spielrein’s early work from Zürich, Vienna, and Berlin. The second volume... Read more

Vol 1:

Foreword

Preface

Acknowledgements

Editors’ and Translators’ Introductory Remarks on the Translation (Volume 1)

 

1. The Psychological Content of a Case of Schizophrenia (Dementia Praecox).

1.1. Introduction

1.2. Paper

 

2. Destruction as Cause of Becoming

2.1. Introduction

2.2. Paper

 

3. Contributions to the Knowledge of the Infantile Soul

3.1. Introduction

3.2. Paper

 

4. Masturbation in Foot Symbolism

4.1. Introduction

4.2. Paper

 

5. Dream of “Father Freudenreich”

5.1. Introduction

5.2. Paper

 

6. Mother Love

6.1. Introduction

6.2. Paper: Mother Love

6.3. Paper: The Unconscious Fantasy in “The Duel” by Kuprin

 

7. The Mother-in-Law

7.1. Introduction

7.2. Paper

 

8. Three Clinical Papers from Berlin, 1914

8.1. Introduction

8.2. Two Menstrual Dreams

8.3. Animal Symbolism and Phobia in a Boy

8.4. The Forgotten Name

 

Bibliography

Index

Vol 2: 

Editors’ and Translators’ Introductory Remarks on the Translation (Volume 2)

 

1. Two Papers from Lausanne (1915-1920)

1.1. Introduction

1.2. Paper: An Unconscious Verdict

1.3. Paper: Expressions of the Oedipus Complex in Childhood

 

2. Five Communications from 1920

2.1. Introduction

2.2. Paper: Little Renata’s Theory of the Origin of Man

2.3. Paper: The Sense of Shame in Children

2.4. Paper: The Weak Woman

2.5. Paper: On Numbers and Arithmetic Problems that are Difficult to Remember

2.6. Paper: Repressed Oral Erotism

 

3. Three Short Clinical Papers in Geneva (1921-1923)

3.1. Introduction

3.2. Paper: A Brief Analysis of an Infantile Phobia

3.3. Paper: Postage Stamp Dream

3.4. Paper: An Observer-Type

 

4. Two Reports, Geneva (1921-1922)

4.1. Introduction

4.2. Paper: Russian Literature

4.3. Paper: Switzerland

 

5. Who is the Author of the Crime?

5.1. Introduction

5.2. Paper

 

6. The Emergence and Development of the Child’s Words Papa and Mama

6.1. Introduction

6.1. Paper: On the Question of the Emergence and Development of Spoken Language

6.2. Paper: On the Emergence of the Child’s Words Papa and Mama

 

7. Two Clinical Papers in French, Geneva 1923

7.1. Introduction

7.2. Paper: Dream and Vision of Shooting Stars

7.3. Paper: The Motor Car: Symbol of Male Potency

 

8. The Three Questions

8.1. Introduction

8.2. Paper

 

9. Some Analogies Between the Thought of the Child, that of the Aphasic, and that of Subconscious Thought

9.1. Introduction

9.2. Paper: The Thought Process of a Two-and-a-half-year-old Child

9.3. Paper: Some Analogies Between the Thought of the Child, that of the Aphasic, and that of Subconscious Thought

 

10. Time in the Subliminal Life of the Soul

10.1. Introduction

10.2. Paper: Psychological Considerations on the Problem of Time

10.3. Paper: Time in the Subliminal Life of the Soul

 

11. Some Short Notes on Childhood

19.1. Introduction

19.2. Paper

 

12. On Dr Skalkovsky’s Paper

12.1. Introduction

12.2. Paper

 

13. Children’s Drawing with Eyes Open and Closed

13.1. Introduction

13.2. Paper

 

Bibliography

Index

Biography

Michael Gerard Plastow is a psychoanalyst of The Freudian School of Melbourne, School of Lacanian Psychoanalysis, Australia. He is the author of Sabina Spielrein and the Poetry of Psychoanalysis (Routledge, 2019).

Christiane Weller is Associate Professor in European Languages (German) at Monash University, Australia. She has published extensively on German literature and in the medical humanities (psychoanalytic theory, psychiatric art collections, psychosis and writing). She is a member of The Freudian School of Melbourne, School of Lacanian Psychoanalysis.