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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    West Lafayette, Ind : Purdue University Press
    ISBN: 1557531935 , 9781557531933
    Language: English
    Pages: XVI, 242 S.
    DDC: 616.89/17/0943
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Deutsche Psychoanalytische Gesellschaft History ; Psychoanalysis Political aspects ; History ; National socialism ; Psychoanalysis History ; Psychoanalyse ; Nationalsozialismus ; Geschichte der Psychologie ; Deutschland ; Psychoanalyse ; Geschichte 1933-1945 ; Drittes Reich ; Psychoanalyse ; Goering, Matthias Heinrich 1879-1945 ; Institut für Psychogene Erkrankungen ; Geschichte 1933-1945 ; Deutschland ; Psychoanalyse ; Geschichte 1933-1945 ; Drittes Reich ; Goering, Matthias Heinrich 1879-1945 ; Institut für Psychogene Erkrankungen
    Description / Table of Contents: Part I : The background1. The way they were : the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute (BPI) emerges as a role model for the profession -- 2. The role of the Göring Institute in the endurance and modification of the psychoanalytic continuum in Germany -- Part II : Political ideology and psychoanalysis -- 3. Totalitarianism and psychoanalysis -- 4. The rise and fall of Marxism within the psychoanalytic movement -- 5. Jung and Jungian psychology : the theoretical color bearer for the new German (Nazi) psychotherapy -- Part III : Hitler in power -- 6. The beginnings of Nazi rule and the initial reaction of the psychoanalytic community -- 7. M.H. Göring : head of the German Medical Society for Psychotherapy and the Göring Institute -- 8. The Freudian response to the Nazi threat in Germany : Jones and the IPA -- 9. The Göring Institute -- 10. The integration of the Nazi medical principles of healing and extermination within the Göring Institute : the roles of M. H. Göring and Herbert Linden -- 11. "Finis Austriae" (The end of Austria) or "The stronghold of Jewish psychotherapy has fallen" -- 12. Compromise, collaboration, and resistance among the psychoanalysts during the Third Reich : Carl Müller-Braunschweig, Käthe Dräger, and John Rittmeister -- Part IV : Psychoanalysis in Germany after the Third Reich : the long road back -- 13. War's end -- 14. Postwar legacies -- Part V : Some conclusions -- 15. The continuity vs. discontinuity of psychoanalysis during the Third Reich -- 16. Do all roads we traveled lead to Werner Kemper as a source of disinformation? -- 17. Thoughts about psychoanalysis in Germany : perspectives and prospectives.
    Description / Table of Contents: Part I : The background -- 1. The way they were : the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute (BPI) emerges as a role model for the profession -- 2. The role of the Göring Institute in the endurance and modification of the psychoanalytic continuum in Germany -- Part II : Political ideology and psychoanalysis -- 3. Totalitarianism and psychoanalysis -- 4. The rise and fall of Marxism within the psychoanalytic movement -- 5. Jung and Jungian psychology : the theoretical color bearer for the new German (Nazi) psychotherapy -- Part III : Hitler in power -- 6. The beginnings of Nazi rule and the initial reaction of the psychoanalytic community -- 7. M.H. Göring : head of the German Medical Society for Psychotherapy and the Göring Institute -- 8. The Freudian response to the Nazi threat in Germany : Jones and the IPA -- 9. The Göring Institute -- 10. The integration of the Nazi medical principles of healing and extermination within the Göring Institute : the roles of M. H. Göring and Herbert Linden -- 11. "Finis Austriae" (The end of Austria) or "The stronghold of Jewish psychotherapy has fallen" -- 12. Compromise, collaboration, and resistance among the psychoanalysts during the Third Reich : Carl Müller-Braunschweig, Käthe Dräger, and John Rittmeister -- Part IV : Psychoanalysis in Germany after the Third Reich : the long road back -- 13. War's end -- 14. Postwar legacies -- Part V : Some conclusions -- 15. The continuity vs. discontinuity of psychoanalysis during the Third Reich -- 16. Do all roads we traveled lead to Werner Kemper as a source of disinformation? -- 17. Thoughts about psychoanalysis in Germany : perspectives and prospectives
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (p. 223-233) and index
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