Jahrbuch der Psychoanalyse / Band 57 Psychoanalyse Aus Berlin 1920-1933 - Transfer und Emigration |
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Editor:
| Frank, Claudia Hermanns, Ludger M. Lochel, Elfriede |
Contribution by:
| Fichtner, Gerhard May, Ulrike Robinson, Ken Rolnik, Eran J. Schmidt, Erika S. Schroter, Michael Simon, Josef Thompson, Nellie L. Tomlinson, W. Craig Tonnesmann, Margret |
Series title: | Jahrbuch der Psychoanalyse Ser. |
ISBN: | 978-3-7728-2057-1 |
Publication Date: | Aug 2008 |
Publisher: | frommann-holzboog Verlag e.K.
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $49.00 |
Book Description:
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English summary: This volume is a collection of seven revised papers held on the subject dealt with at the 45th International Psychoanalysis Conference which took place in Berlin in 2007. These are based on the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute, which Max Eitingon founded in 1920 and which he ran until his emigration in 1933. The Institute attracted excellent teachers (for example from Austria and Hungary) and trained people from all over the world to be psychoanalysts using an...
More DescriptionEnglish summary: This volume is a collection of seven revised papers held on the subject dealt with at the 45th International Psychoanalysis Conference which took place in Berlin in 2007. These are based on the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute, which Max Eitingon founded in 1920 and which he ran until his emigration in 1933. The Institute attracted excellent teachers (for example from Austria and Hungary) and trained people from all over the world to be psychoanalysts using an innovative training program consisting of psychoanalysis, supervision and seminars and lectures on theory. Concise individual reports convey how the psychoanalysts returning to their home countries and the many university lecturers who emigrated to the USA, England and Israel not only took these theories with them but also contributed to the institutionalization of this psychoanalytic training in their own countries. German description: Der Themenband versammelt sieben uberarbeitete Vortrage zum Thema des 45. Internationalen Psychoanalytischen Kongresses, der im Juli 2007 in Berlin stattfand. Ausgangspunkt ist das 1920 von Max Eitingon gegrundete (und bis zu seiner Emigration 1933 geleitete) Berliner Psychoanalytische Institut, das hervorragende Lehrer anzog (u.a. aus Osterreich und Ungarn) und mit einem innovativen Ausbildungsmodell (aus Analyse, Supervision und theoretischen Seminaren und Vorlesungen) Interessenten aus aller Welt zu Analytikern ausbildete. Pragnante Einzelschilderungen vermitteln, wie die in ihre Heimatlander zuruckkehrenden Psychoanalytiker und die vielen aus Deutschland emigrierten Dozenten in die USA, nach England und Israel nicht nur ihre theoretische Ausrichtung mitbrachten, sondern zur Institutionalisierung der Ausbildung an den jeweiligen Orten beitrugen.