Includes bibliographical references (pages 212-213).
Climate of opinion -- Development of the hero -- Steps and stumbles -- The problem of psychology -- Seduction -- Dreams -- Consolidation -- Agenbite -- New world -- Friend and foe -- Structure -- Culture -- Limitations -- Final things -- Loss.
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"Referred to as "the father of psychoanalysis," Sigmund Freud is credited with championing the "talking cure" and charting the human unconscious. Both revered and reviled, he was a brilliant innovator but also a man of troubling contradictions--sometimes tyrannical, often misrepresenting the course and outcome of his treatments to make the "facts" match his theories. Peter D. Kramer--acclaimed author, practicing psychiatrist, and a leading national authority on mental health--offers a stunning new take on this controversial figure. Kramer is at once critical and sympathetic, presenting Freud the mythmaker, the storyteller, the writer whose books will survive among the classics of our literature, and the genius who transformed the way we see ourselves."--Publisher's website.
A brief biography on the life and works of Sigmund Freud that offers both a critical and sympathetic look into his practice and theories.