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LEADER: 03053cam a22003974a 4500
001 009289076-8
005 20040301075752.0
008 030710s2003 nyua b 001 0 eng
010 $a 2003015654
020 $a1590510097 (alk. paper)
035 0 $aocm52728852
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dDLC
041 1 $aeng$hger
042 $apcc
050 00 $aBF175.5.D74$bF7436 2003
060 00 $a2004 A-839
060 10 $aWM 11.1$bM338d 2003
082 00 $a154.6/3$222
100 1 $aMarinelli, Lydia.
245 10 $aDreaming by the book :$bFreud's Interpretation of dreams and the history of the psychoanalytic movement /$cLydia Marinelli and Andreas Mayer ; translated by Susan Fairfield.
260 $aNew York :$bOther Press,$cc2003.
300 $avi, 264 p. :$bill. ;$c24 cm.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. [239]-251) and index.
505 0 $aBetween resistance and disagreement : lay and specialist readers -- Unconscious writing : dream analyses in letters -- Conceited doctors and well trained patients -- A "central office for dreams: : collective research on symbolism -- Reversals of the theory -- Philology, typography, and oedipus complex -- Theory in the dream : the phenomenon of autosymbolism -- Analysis without synthesis -- The visibility of repression -- The return of the author Freud -- Dreaming translators and legitimate interpreters -- Afterword: The interpretation of dreams today -- Appendices: Sources for the history of the interpretation of dreams.
520 1 $a"In this study, Marinelli and Mayer make the case that Freud's readers contributed heavily to the numerous revised editions of the book through their invaluable critiques. Marinelli and Mayer systematically emphasize the involvement of these individuals, who have not previously been taken into consideration or who have been insufficiently accounted for in the editions of The Interpretation of Dreams to date: the critics, colleagues, and patients who formed the audience for each edition of the study as it appeared. The various alterations in the text over the course of its eight editions are thus not examined as immanent theoretical movements oriented toward Freud alone. Instead, they are examined as indicators for social negotiations between the author and the members of the growing psychoanalytic movement in Zurich and Vienna. The authors provide strong arguments toward the case that psychoanalytic theory is the outcome of collective and conflictual processes, revealing that The Interpretation of Dreams is inextricably intertwined with the formation of the psychoanalytic movement and its bifurcations."--Jacket.
600 10 $aFreud, Sigmund,$d1856-1939.$tTraumdeutung.
650 0 $aDream interpretation$xHistory.
650 0 $aPsychoanalysis$xHistory.
600 12 $aFreud, Sigmund,$d1856-1939.$tTraumdeutung.
650 12 $aPsychoanalysis$xHistory.
650 22 $aDreams$xpsychology.
655 7 $aHistory.$2fast
700 1 $aMayer, Andreas.
700 1 $aMayer, Andreas,$d1970-
988 $a20040316
906 $0DLC