Title: Psychoanalysis, Sex and American Culture
1Psychoanalysis, Sex and American Culture
2Psychoanalytic Journals, 1912/13
3International Journal of Psycho-analysis
English-language journal, 1920-
4BELLEVUE ASYLUM KREUZLINGEN SWITZERLAND c. 1900
5Psychoanalytic Clinic, Berlin 1920
Melanie Klein
6Freud, G. Stanley Hall, Carl Jungat Clark
University
Back row (L to R A. Brill, E. Jones and Sandor
Ferenczi
7Freuds Visit to Clark University Worcester,
Mass September 1909
8Freuds Telegram, 1909
9 Boston School of Psychotherapy Morton
Prince James Jackson Putnam
Journal of Abnormal Psychology 1906
Painted by John Singer Sargent, 1890s
10Richard Kraft von Ebing (1840-1902)
PSYCHOPATHIASEXUALIS (1886)
11Havelock Ellis (1859-1939)
Man and Woman A Study of Secondary and
Tertiary Sex Characteristics (1894) Sexual
Inversion (1897)
Studies in the Psychology of Sex (1897-1910)
12Freuds Essay on Sexuality (1905)
- Divided libido, or sexual drive into three
aspects - 1. the impulse (operative in perversions, but
also psychoneurosesdiseases of repression). - 2. the object (the homosexual didnt differ
from others as to drive, but as to object) - 3. the origin or body part involved in
impulse--explains use of fetish) - Conclusion That everyone was somewhat
perverseas a result of universal sexual impulse.
13American Psychoanalytic Societies
- American Association of Psychoanalysis, 1911.
- New York Psychoanalytic Society,1911 (15 founding
physicians). - NY Psychoanalytic Society all analysts must have
analysis with a competent analyst, 1923. - NY Psychoanalytic Society decreed practitioners
must be physicians, 1924.
14Early American Psychoanalysts
- James Jackson Putnamneurologist (Boston)
- Isador Coriat (Boston) psychoanalysis and
literature - William Alanson White (head of St. Elizabeths,
Wash DC) stressed social and environmental causes
of mental illness - Smith Ely Jelliffe (New York)
- A.A. Brill (New York) translated Freuds work in
the 1910s
15St. Elizabeths hospitalWilliam Alanson White
16Psychoanalysis American-Styleearly 20th century
- All mental disorders (except with definite
somatic causes), were interpreted according to
model of psychoneuroses (e.g. hysteria,
obsessions). - Caused by conflicts between wishes (results of
instinctual drives) and internal repression - Causes traced back to early childhood, usually
sexually tinged family relationships - Sexuality most important instinctual drive
- Psychoanalysis was to overcome resistances of
patient - Dominance of Ego psychology--focus on adaptation
of ego to social demands, rather than Id
psychology (repressed desires).
17Freuds Draft of a 1926 Encyclopedia Britannica
Entry Some Elementary Lessons
in Psychoanalysis Manuscript Division Library
of Congress
18 Max Eastman, socialist editor of The
Masses, 1913, on socialism and the
arts. in analysis with Smith Ely
Jelliffe editor of Journal of Nervous and
Mental Disease, 1902 Developed extensive
psychoanalytic practice, NYC coined term
psychosomatic Interpreted Eastmans neurosis
as result of hostility to the father working
itself out in prejudiced radicalism
19- Mabel Dodge Luhan
- salon hostess
- In Greenwich Village,
- NYC for social
- activists and artists.
- In analysis with
- A. Brill
- Smith Ely Jelliffe
- serialized her own
- psycho-analysis for the
- Hearst newspapers
- 1917-1918
20André Tridon, Psychoanalysis and Love 1922
In the searching light of that most curious and
interesting new method, psychoanalysis, the
soul of love is laid bare
21Mrs. Mardens Ordeal 1916 by James Hay
That a warped childhood is to contribute in
later years to a warped and tragic womanhood.
( p. 271)
22- You will have to tell me all thingsThis is to
be an analysis of your soul, of the depths of
your soul. You will have to tell me what you
believe about religion, the most intimate things
about your life with your husband, the big things
and the little things, sex things and all. You
may keep nothing back from me. In this way only
can we analyze your soul and see in what way it
has gone wrongYou see, you suffer, not because
you are sick, but because you are unhappy. - the Psychoanalyst, in Mrs. Marsdens
Ordeal, p. 5.
231955
24(No Transcript)
25More on Psychoanalysis and Culture
- Nathan Hale, Freud and the Americans The
beginnings of Psychoanalysis in the United
States, 1876-1917 (Oxford, 1971) - Nathan Hale, The Rise and Crisis of
Psychoanalysis Freud and the Americans,
1917-1985 ( Oxford, 1995) - Eli Zaretsky, Secrets of the Soul A social and
cultural history of psychoanalysis (NY Vintage
Books, 2005) - George Makari, Revolution in Mind The Creation
of Psychoanalysis ( NY Harper, 2008)