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Freud for Beginners
by Richard Appignanesi
Available from Powells Used Books
$7.50
on 8-20-2008
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Features
ISBN Number: 9780375714603 Author: Appignanesi, Richard Publisher: Pantheon Books Author: Zarate, Oscar Location: New York Subject: History Subject: Psychoanalysis Subject: Social Scientists & Psychologists Subject: Psychoanalysts Subject: Medical, General Edition Number: 1st American ed. Edition Description: Includes bibliographical references: (p. 174.) Series Volume: 96 Publication Date: July 2003 Cover Type: Paperback Written in: English Illustrations: Yes Number of Pages: 176 Book Size: 8.36x5.48x.54 in. .50 lbs.
Freud for Beginners explains everything you need to know about psychoanalysis--super-egos, egos, ids, neurosis, psychosis, hysteria, dreams, the unconscious, sexuality--and about the man who (with some help from The Rat Man, Anna O., and Little Hans) revolutionized our attitudes toward mental illness, religion, sex, and culture. Synopsis: "Freud for Beginners" explains everything readers need to know about psychoanalysis--super-egos, egos, ids, neurosis, psychosis, hysteria, dreams, the unconscious, sexuality--and about the man who revolutionized attitudes toward mental illness, religion, sex, and culture. Synopsis: The Beginner Books — " Their cartoon format and irreverent wit make difficult ideas accessible and entertaining." — Newsday Everything you need to know about neurosis, libido, ego, and id — but somehow it slipped your mind. Freud for Beginners is a perfect introduction to the life and thought of the man whose discovery of psychoanalysis revolutionized our attitudes towards mental illness, religion, sex, and culture. This documentary cartoon book plunges us into the world of late-nineteenth-century Vienna in which Freud grew up. We explore his early background in science, his work as a therapist, his encounter with cocaine, and his theories on the unconscious, dreams, the Oedipus Complex, and sexuality. We meet his family, his friend and enemies, and his patients — The Rat Man, Anna O., Little Hans — and we get an insider's view as the psychoanalytic movement is launched. The zany art and probing text do an extraordinary job of simplifying Freud without trivializing him.
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