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Two new books on Sigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis

Freud: An Intellectual Biography & Cold War Freud: Psychoanalysis in an Age of Catastrophes

March 21, 2017 16:27
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2 min read

Just a short while after the publication of a major new biography of Freud, by Elisabeth Roudinesco (reviewed in the JC of November 25, 2016), another has come along in the form of an “intellectual biography” by the well-known American psychoanalyst, Joel Whitebook. Like Roudinesco’s book, Whitebook’s is strongly argued, well-informed, sympathetic to Freud, and energetically opinionated.

Unlike Roudinesco, however, Whitebook presents little new material and does not seem to have used the most recently released archives. Instead, he relies on a relatively limited range of secondary sources as well as Freud’s own major writings. Despite this, he presents a sensitive account of Freud that, among other things, gives a realistic portrait of the Jewishness that ran as a partially submerged but crucial theme throughout his life.

But this Freud is not a comprehensive “life”, and it skates quite quickly over many aspects of Freud’s biography as well as omitting most of the context for the emergence of psychoanalysis as a powerful practice and organised profession. What it does offer is a lively and chronologically well-grounded account of Freud’s major theoretical developments and, in particular, of two of Freud’s formative intellectual relationships, those with Wilhelm Fleiss in the 1890s and Carl Jung in the early 1900s.

Whitebook addresses all this from the perspective of a contemporary psychoanalyst who is alert to what he sees as Freud’s inability to deal with his very difficult mother — an issue that he legitimately claims has been undervalued in the literature. This is why, he thinks, Freud consistently neglected the role of the mother in psychic life, and instead overvalued those aspects of the European “enlightenment” that privileged “masculine” reason.

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