Psychoanalysis and culture. Essays in honor of Géza Róheim

Primary author
Publisher
John Wiley
Place of Publication
New York
Date of Publication
1967 (1951)
Edition
reprint
Number of Pages
462
Classification
III World capitalism, capitalist society and the left movements; socialist movements in general | F Consciousness and culture
Description
Wilbur and Muensterberger: Introduction
Lorand: Foreword
I Culture and personality
Hartmann, Kris and Loewenstein: Some Psychoanalytic Comments on "Culture and Personality"
Spitz: Environment versus Race: Environment as an Etiological factor in Psychiatric Disturbances in Infancy
Menninger: Totemic Aspects of Contemporary Attitudes Towards Animals
R. and C. Berndt: The Concept of Abnormality in an Australian Aboriginal Society
Devereux: The Primal Scene and Juvenile Heterosexuality in Mohave Society
Dyk: Notes and Illustrations of Navaho Sex Behavior
Kluckhohn and Morgan: Some Notes on Navaho Dreams
Goldfrank: "Old Man" and the Father Image in Blood (Blackfoot) Society
II Sociology
Bonaparte: Some Psychoanalytic and Anthropological Insights Applied to Sociology
Rickman: Number and the Human Sciences
La Barre: Family and Symbol
Axelrad and Maury: Identification as a Mechanism of Adaptation
Waelder: Authoritarianism and Totalitarianism: Psychological Comments on a Problem of Power
Flugel: Tolerance
Eissler: Malingering
Balint: On Punishing Offenders
Money-Kyrle: Some Aspects of State and Character in Germany
III Epistemology
Wilbur: A Psychoanalist's Ruminations on an Epistemological Problem
Bergler: The Mirror of Self-Knowledge
IV Mythology
Campbell: Bios and Mythos: Prolegomena to a science of Mythology
Zeckel: The Totemistic Significance of the Unicorn
V Linguistics
Bunker and Lewin: A Psychoanalytic Notation on the Root GN, KN, CN
VI Art and Literature
Muensterberger: Roots of Primitive Art
Bychowski: From Catharsis to Work of Art: The Making of an Artist
Grotjahn: About the Representation of Death in the Art of Antiquity and in the Unconscious of Modern Men
Kanzer: The Self-Analytic Literature of Robert Louis Stevenson
Pederson-Krag: "O Poesy! For Thee I Hold My Pen"
Copy Number
1
Identifier
III F   WIL
Languages