The History of the Psychoanalytic Movement
by Freud, Sigmund
Freud's combative account of psychoanalysis's first twenty years, including his bitter breaks with Adler and Jung. Part history, part polemic, it reveals the personal drama behind the science.
94
Pages
2h
Reading time
1914
Published
23,572
words
94
Pages
2h 29m
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4
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Free to ReadNERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE MONOGRAPH SERIES NO. 25 THE HISTORY OF THE PSYCHOANALYTIC MOVEMENT BY PROF. DR. SIGMUND FREUD, LL.D. OF VIENNA AUTHORIZED ENGLISH TRANSLATION BY A. A. BRILL, PH.B., M.D. LECTURER IN PSYCHOANALYSIS AND ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY FORMER CHIEF OF CLINIC OF PSYCHIATRY, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY NEW YORK THE NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE PUBLISHING COMPANY 1917 Copyright, 1917, by NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE PUBLISHING COMPANY PRESS OF THE NEW ERA PRINTING COMPANY LANCASTER, PA _Fluctuat nec mergitur_ From the Coat of Arms of the City of Paris I If in what follows I bring any contribution to the history of the psychoanalytic movement nobody must be surprised at the subjective nature of this paper, nor at the rôle which falls to me therein. For psychoanalysis is my creation; for ten years I was the only one occupied with it, and all the annoyance which this new subject caused among my contemporaries has been hurled upon my head in the form of criticism. Even today, when I am no longer the only psychoanalyst, I feel myself justified in assuming that none can know better than myself what psychoanalysis is, wherein it differs from other methods of investigating the psychic life, what its name should cover, or what might better be designated as something else. In the year 1909, when I was first privileged to speak publicly on psychoanalysis in an American University, fired by this momentous occasion for my endeavors, I decl...