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Review: Sex versus Survival

Talking points: an analyst analysed

January 8, 2015 15:06
Keira Knightley, who played Sabina on screen with Michael Fassbinder (Freud) and Viggo Mortensen (Jung)

By

Irma Kurtz

2 min read

By John Launer
Duckworth £20

A biographer must untangle the web of another's life. And given the maxim, "physician, heal thyself", what a tangled web that is when the other is an early practitioner of psychoanalysis and, furthermore, a woman.

Marked during her Russian childhood in the late 19th century by a depressive and dominating father, Sabina Speilrein began her psychoanalytical path in Zurich possibly as one of Carl Jung's own analysands, certainly under his thrall. The pretty girl - Keira Knightley played her in A Dangerous Method - fell in love with him and they shared an erotic attachment that Jung and Freud conspired together to keep discreet.

Despite Jung's antisemitism - or perhaps because of it? - he was attracted sexually to Jewish women such as Speilrein and he chose Jewish men as father figures with whom he could fall out bitterly, as he quickly did with Freud. In his book about Speilrein, John Launer manages to make Jung and Freud neither villains nor heroes, simply background characters in the odyssey of his peripatetic and intellectual heroine.

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