The Online Books Page presents SERIAL ARCHIVE LISTINGS for The Psychoanalytic Review

Click here to access SERIAL ARCHIVE LISTINGS for The Psychoanalytic Review.

The Psychoanalytic Review began publication in 1913. Issue copyright renewals began in 1932. From 1958 to 1962, it was known as “Psychoanalysis and the Psychoanalytic Review”, reflecting a merger with the journal “Psychoanalysis”. It reverted to its original name in 1963. It is still published today.

Click here to read the first volume.

Laplanche: Whom and What We Have Lost by N. Szajnberg, MD, Managing Editor

Jean Laplanche, a man as careful with words as a surgeon with scalpel, died this week. International Psychoanalysis.net will honor his life and work with three pieces: his 1991 “Is Psychoanalysis Curable” (courtesy of Jimmy Fisher); a classic translated by Jonathan House; and an interview.

In the “Curable,” piece below, Laplanche states that overusing psychoanalytic terms leads to ridicule; further, even in 1991, psychoanalysis was considered passé.

Yet, for Laplanche, psychoanalysis — the method — leads to lucidity and freedom. These are subversive and even revolutionary activities.

Continue reading Laplanche: Whom and What We Have Lost by N. Szajnberg, MD, Managing Editor

Freud’s Friends and Enemies One Hundred Years Later, Part 3

Click Here To Read: Freud’s Friends and Enemies One Hundred Years Later, Part 3 posted by Richard Shweder on the Cultural Community Psychology Today blog on February 4, 2010.

Click Here To Read: Freud’s Friends and Enemies One Hundred Years Later, Part 2 on this website.

Click Here To Read: Freud’s Friends and Enemies One Hundred Years Later, Part 1 on this website