BIBLIOGRAPHY
(* books especially for young readers)
Adler, Robert E.
Medical Firsts: From Hippocrates to the Human Genome
. New York: Wiley, 2004.
Breger, Louis.
Freud: Darkness in the Midst of Vision
. New York: Wiley, 2000.
Cole, Michael, with Sheila Cole and Cynthia Lightfoot.
The Development of Children.
New York: Worth Publishers, fifth edition, 2004.
Ellenberger, Henri F.
The Discovery of the Unconscious: The History and Evolution of Dynamic Psychiatry
. New York: Basic Books, 1970.
Flam, Lydia.
Freud the Man: An Intellectual Biography.
New York: Other Press, 2003.
Gādwall, Lynn.
Madness in America: Cultural and Medical Perceptions of Mental Illness Before 1914
. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1995.
Gāy, Peter. .
Freud: A Life for Our Time
. New York: Norton, 1998.
Heller, Shāron.
Freud A to Z
. New York: Wiley, 2005.
* Inquest, H. P.
The Great Brain Book: An Inside Look at the Inside of Your Head
. New York: Scholastic, 2004.
Johnston, William M.
Vienna, Vienna: The Golden Age, 1815- 1914
. New York: Crown, 1980.
* Muckenhoupt, Mārgaret
. Sigmund Freud, Explorer of the Unconscious
. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.
Pānek, Richard.
The Invisible Century: Einstein, Freud, and the Search for Hidden Universes.
New York: Viking, 2004.
Porter, Roy.
Madness: A Brief History.
New York: Oxford University Press, 2002.
Porter, Roy.
A Social History of Madness: The World Through the Eyes of the Insane.
New York: Dutton, 1987.
* Reef, Cātherine.
Sigmund Freud: Pioneer of the Mind
. New York: Clarion, 2001.
Robinson, Pāul A.
Freud and His Critics
. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1993.
Webster, Richard.
Why Freud Was Wrong: Sin, Science, and Psychoanalysis.
New York: HarperCollins, 1995.
Zaretsky, Eli.
Secrets of the Soul: A Social and Cultural History of Psychoanalysis
. New York: Knopf, 2004.
Zimmer, Cārl.
Soul Made Flesh: The Discovery of the Brain—and How It Changed the World
. New York: The Free Press, 2004.
WEB SITES
(Verified May 2006)
INDEX
Adler, Alfred
aggression
Alexander the Great
“alienist,”
America
American Psychological Association
ancient mythology
Andreas-Salome, Lou
“Anna O.”
anti-Semitism
psychoanalysis and
World War II and
aphasia
Aristotle
“Art of Becoming an Original Writer in Three Days, The,”
Athena
Auden, W. H.
automatic writing
Babylonians
bacteriology
Bauer, Ida
Beethoven, Ludwig von
Berggasse 19 (Freud’s consulting office)
couch in
described
opening of
re-creation of, in London
seating arrangement
Bernays, Edward
Bernays, Minna
biology
bipolar disorder
birth order
Blake, William
Blueler, Eugen
Book of the Id, The
(Groddick)
Börne, Ludwig
brain, the
as the center of thought and sensation
chemical treatment of
early views of
emotional
neurological
scientific investigation of
three parts of
Brentano, Franz
Breuer, Josef
Brill, A. A.
Broca, Paul
case studies
cerebral palsy
Charcot, Jean-Martin
child psychology
Christie, Agatha
Civilization and Its Discontents
(Freud)
Clark University
cocaine
Coleridge, Samuel
Copernicus, Nicolaus
core experiences
Cromwell, Oliver
Darwin, Charles
da Vinci, Leonardo
dementia
depression
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), The
(APA)
“Dora,”
Doyle, Arthur Conan
dreams
dreamwork
eels
Ego
Egyptians, ancient
Einstein, Albert
Electra complex
electroshock therapy
Elektrotherapie
(Erb)
Elisabeth von R.
Emmy von N.
Erb, William
Eriksson, Erik
“errors,”
evolution
faradization
Ferenczi, Sándor
Fliess, Wilhelm
Franz Joseph, emperor
free association
Freud, Amalia (mother)
Freud, Anna (daughter)
Freud, Jacob (father)
anti-Semitism and
death of
Freud, Julius (brother)
Freud, Martha Bernays (wife)
described
family life of
marriage of
Freud, Mathilde (daughter)
Freud, Sigmund
in America
anti-Semitism and
as “archeologist,”
childhood of
cigars of
death of
described
desire to be a hero
desire to be a scientist
discussion group favored by
ego of
in exile in London
famous books written by
fascination with sex
finances of
first papers
girls/women and
given name of
heir to
heroes of
as intern
Jung and,
see
Jung, Carl Gustav
lasting legacy of
letters of
as loner
medical curiosity
mentors of
as middle and high school student
mother of
the occult and
office of,
see
Berggasse 19 (Freud’s consulting office)
in perpetual pain
psychoanalysis,
see
psychoanalysis
reputation of
self-understanding and
siblings and
in Vienna
wife of,
see
Freud, Martha Bernays (wife)
as writer
X-ray eyes of
Freudianism
Freudian slip
Freud Museum (London)
Galen
Gall, Franz Joseph
germ theory of disease
Goethe
Gradiva
Graf, Herbert
Greeks, ancient
Groddeck, Georg
Hall, G. Stanley
Hammond, William
Hannibal
hellebore
Hippocrates
Hitler, Adolf
Horney, Karen
humor
humors (fluids) generated by the brain
hydrotherapy
hypnosis
hysteria
hypnosis and
male
painful memories and
psychoanalysis and,
see
psychoanalysis
repressed sex drive and
symptoms of
treatments for
see also specific patients
Id
infection
inferiority complex
International Psychoanalytic Association
Interpretation of Dreams, The
(Freud)
James, William
Jews
Jofi (dog)
Jokes and Their Relation to the Unconscious
(Freud)
Joke-work
Jones, Ernest
Jung, Carl Gustav
in America
breaks with Freud
different cultures and
as heir to Freud
as “mystical,”
Kahane, Max
“Katharina,”
Kepler, Johannes
Klimt, Gustav
Koch, Robert
Koller, Carl
Lanzer, Ernst
libido
Lister, Joseph
lithium
“Little Hans,”
Lucy R.
Mahler, Gustav
manic depression
Manual of Brain Diseases
(Wernicke)
Massachusetts General Hospital
memoirs, painful
mental illness
brain anatomy and
early psychiatrists and
early “treatment” of
Galen’s view of
hysteria and,
see
hysteria
Leonardo’s view of
listening to patients with
medication for
peasant folk’s view of
psychoanalysis and,
see
psychoanalysis
Mesmer, Franz
Meynert, Theodor
Michelangelo
Middle Ages
Mona Lisa
Moser, Baroness Fanny
mothers
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
Napoleon
Nazis
neurology
neurons
Newton, Isaac
noses
Nothnagel, Hermann
numerology
obsessive-compulsive behavior
Oedipus complex
Oedipus Rex
(Sophocles)
“On Nature,”
On the Origin of Species
(Darwin)
Pankejeff, Sergei
Pappenheim, Bertha
Pasteur, Louis
penis envy
phrenology
Plato
positivism
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
power of suggestion
Principles of Psychology, The
(James)
“Project for a Scientific Psychology,”
Prozac
psychiatry
birth of
as branch of science
early
psychoanalysis
acting as a mirror
critics of
discussion group
dreams and
emotional detachment and
first patient to undergo
future stars of
goal of
listening to patients in
as new term
notes of sessions
outcome of
patient qualities
popularity of
repressed feelings and
self-analysis
society as a whole and
standards and qualifications for analysts
as study of the human condition
technique of
trial week
in the U.S.
words and
psychology
Psychopathology of Everyday Life, The
(Freud)
“Psychotic Dr. Schreber, The,”
Putnam, James
Rank, Otto
“Rat Man, The,”
Reitler, Rudolf
repressed feelings
rest cures
Royal Society
Sayers, Dorothy L.
schizophrenia
Schliemann, Heinrich
Schubert, Franz
scientific method
defined
Freud and questions addressed by
Scientific Revolution
Semmelweis, Ignaz
sex drive
in children
sexual abuse
Shakespeare, William
shell shock
“Sherlock Holmes,”
sibling rivalry
Silberstein, Eduard
Society of Physicians
Sophocles
“Spanish Academy,”
Sphinx, riddle of
Spurzheim, Johann
Stekel, Wilhelm
“stone of madness,”
Strauss, Johann
Studies in Hysteria
(Freud and Breuer)
Superego
survival of the fittest
talk therapy,
see
psychoanalysis
Thorazine
Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality
(Freud)
Time
magazine
unconscious
dreams
jokes and
three parts of
University of Vienna
Vienna, Austria
described
Freud’s view of
Vienna General Hospital
Vienna Psychoanalytic Society
Waldeyer, Wilhelm
Wednesday Psychological Society
Weininger, Otto