1st Edition

Freud and the Imaginative World

By Harry Trosman Copyright 1985
248 Pages
by Routledge

248 Pages
by Routledge

233 Pages
by Routledge

The current resurgence of interest in the scientific origins of psychoanalysis has overshadowed the artistic and literary models to which Freud had recourse time and again in the development and presentation of his theories.  It is this neglected aesthetic wellspring of psychoanalysis to which Harry Trosman calls attention in Freud and the Imaginative World . Trosman enriches our... Read more
I. The Claims of Humanism - Influence and Identity  
- Freud and the Formative Culture
- Natural Sciences and Human Concerns
- Modes of Influence on Freud's Creativity
- Artistic and Neurotic Fantasy
- A Claim Avowed: Freud's Jewish Identity
II. Psychoanalysis and the Arts
- Freud's Style and the Matter of Style
- The Psychoanalysis of Aesthetic Response
- Comparative Views of Leonardo da Vinci and Psychoanalytic Biography
- Psychoanalysis and Literary Criticism: Hamlet as Prototype
- Psychoanalytic Views of Creativity

Biography

Harry Trosman, M.D., is Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Chicago, and a faculty member and Training and Supervising Analyst at the Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis.

"Trosman offers new insights into Freud's creativity and its relation to his cultural and familial roots.  His book integrates a scholarly review of psychoanalytic history, a sophisticated understanding of modern psychoanalysis, and a sensitive and respectful recognition of the unique characteristics of art and the humanities into a major new synthesis."

- Robert Michels, M.D.

"This integrative survey will be useful both to experienced workers in applied analysis and the beginning student. It is a fine presentation of many central issues in the field and is highly recommended."

- Robert Galatzer-Levy, M.D., The Psychohistory Review