YIVO Publications

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 The late Max Weinreich was cofounder of the YIVO Institute in Vilna and one of the world’s most important scholars of the Yiddish language. He completed History of the Yiddish Language, his magnum opus, shortly before his death.  Max Weinreich used psychoanalytic precepts to study the psychology of Eastern European  adolescents, and translated four of Freud’s works into Yiddish.
 
 
 
Click Here to Read: Wikipedia Article on Max Weinreich  
 
 
  
 
  
 
Max Weinreich 

 Hitler’s Professors: The Part of Scholarship in Germany’s Crimes Against the Jewish People by  Max Weinreich. Reprint with new introduction by Sir Martin Gilbert 1999 / Yale University Press / $20.00

This classic book examines the role of leading scholars, philosophers,  historians, and scientists—in Hitler’s rise to power and eventual war of extermination against the Jews. Written in 1946 by one of the greatest scholars of European Jewish history and culture, it is now reissued with a new introduction by the prominent historian Martin Gilbert.

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Book Review of Illuminations by Eva Hoffman and Notes by Julie Jaffee Nagel

Click Here to Read: “The First Impulse Was to Write about Music,” a review of the novel Illuminations by Eva Hoffman, reviewed by Michael J. Riesz, in The Independent Book Section on Friday, June 17th, 2008.

From the Music Editor, Julie Jafee Nagel: Career choice begins in early childhood for the musician, who, unlike other highly trained professionals   (e.g., doctors, lawyers) can decide on an occupation at an older age.   This fact has profound implications for mental and social development as the people who wind up at music schools and conservatories start lessons typically in childhood, spend numerous hours alone practicing, and are influenced profoundly during their growing years by parent and teacher attitudes and relationships.  One’s ego develops alongside with one’s talent and object relationships.  By adolescence and young adult years, there is a tremendous ego investment in oneself as a musician, not to mention the dollars spent on lessons and  instruments. Further, the early age at which a young person finds he or she can not only find pleasure in competence at an instrument but also speak nonverbally  through a musical instrument has profound implications for psycho-social development.  The success or derailment of an eventual career for one with talent and for one for whom music has become an integral part of the self has profound  intrapsychic,  interpersonal, and social implications .  Continue reading Book Review of Illuminations by Eva Hoffman and Notes by Julie Jaffee Nagel

Elyn R. Saks’s The Center Cannot Hold Reviewed by Sheldon Goodman

I recently completed a book that should be required reading for those in our field. I have never read a book that so eloquently portrays the trials and tribulations of someone fighting a lifelong battle with a psychiatric illness, Elyn R. Saks’s The Center Cannot Hold (2007). If one searches for a clear understanding of what a patient struggles with and how the mental health system can help and hinder this process this book is it. She admits us to the inner working of her mind, the development of her disorder and her courageous struggle to maintain herself. In the end she is victorious. She is a professor of Law and an adjunct professor of psychiatry at the University of California. We are also privy to her treatment in psychiatric hospitals and her twists and turns as a psychiatric/psychoanalytic patient. I found it fits with great coherence my experiences working in psychiatric hospitals and providing psychoanalytically oriented treatment. We also get an inside peek of the machinations that take place in our psychoanalytic institutes. This is my Fourth of July present to you -our reader of the International Blog. Enjoy.

I would enjoy hearing any comments you might have of your travel through this glorious and heart-wretching book.

Sheldon M. Goodman

Freud’s “Disturbance of Memory on the Acropolis” Revisited by Robert L. Lippman

lilacropolis.jpgClick Here to Read: Freud’s “Disturbance of Memory on the Acropolis” Revisited by Robert L. Lippman
 
This article has been previously published as Lippman, Robert  (2008).  Freud’s “Disturbance of Memory on the Acropolis” Revisited.  The Psychoanalytic Review 95(3) 489-99 and appears here with the requisite rights and permissions and with the permission of the National Psychological Association for Psychoanalysis.

The Struggle Against Mourning by Ilany Kogan

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The Struggle Against Mourning by Ilany Kogan, Reviewed by Sheldon Goodman

“You shouldn’t turn away from treatment . Love consists in this that two solitudes protect and touch and greet each other.”
 (Rilke, 1904, p.27).
“(A)nd I’m resolved my most inmost being shall share in what’s the lot of all mankind that I shall understand their heights and depths, shall fill my heart with all their joy and grieves” (Goethe,p.46,1808) cited in SAM, p.64
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