Details
FREUD, Sigmund. Zur Psychopathologie des Alltagslebens (ber Vergessen, Versprechen, Vergreifen, Aberglaube und Irrtum)...Dritte, vermehrte Auglage. Berlin: S. Karger, 1910.
8o (254 x 165 mm). Original printed gray wrappers (skillfully rebacked preserving some of the printed words from the original spine, a few tiny tears in front cover neatly closed on verso, fore-margin of title-page a little mildewed with a few holes resulting); blue cloth folding case.
Third Edition, Enlarged (to 149 pages) of The Psychopathology of Everyday Life. PRESENTATION COPY inscribed by Freud on Christmas day at top of title-page: "Herrn Dr. Alfred Rie/in alter Freundschaft/25 Dec. [19]00 d. Verf." The recipient was the brother of Dr. Oscar Rie, pediatrician to the Freud children and Freud's cherished life-long friend. Like his brother Oscar, Alfred Rie was also a participant with Freud in the Saturday evening card games held at the house of Prof. Leopold Knigstein." Jones I, p. 362; Stanford 29; Norman F46.
[With]:
FREUD. Psychoanalytische Studien an Werken der Dichtung und Kunst. Vienna, Leipzig and Zurich: Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag, 1924.
8o (240 x 153 mm). Photographic plate; text illustrations. Original printed tan wrappers (cover and title-page silked and with tears repaired and segments supplied, marginal repairs throughout); blue cloth folding case.
FIRST EDITION of this "collection of the psychoanalytical studies of artistic and literary works, originally published in various journals between 1908 and 1919." PRESENTATION COPY, inscribed by Freud at top of title-page: "Herrn Prof. J. Tandler [illegible] d. Verf." "The recipient, Profesor Tandler, was the Austrian Undersecretary of the Minister of Health, who had served with Freud in 1920 on the administration committee of a Viennese convalescent home for children. In 1925 Freud appealed to Tandler on behalf of Theodor Reik, who had been forbidden to practice psychoanalysis by the Municipal Council of Vienna on the ground that he was not a physician" (Norman). Jones III, p. 5; Stanford 54; Norman F113. (2)
8o (254 x 165 mm). Original printed gray wrappers (skillfully rebacked preserving some of the printed words from the original spine, a few tiny tears in front cover neatly closed on verso, fore-margin of title-page a little mildewed with a few holes resulting); blue cloth folding case.
Third Edition, Enlarged (to 149 pages) of The Psychopathology of Everyday Life. PRESENTATION COPY inscribed by Freud on Christmas day at top of title-page: "Herrn Dr. Alfred Rie/in alter Freundschaft/25 Dec. [19]00 d. Verf." The recipient was the brother of Dr. Oscar Rie, pediatrician to the Freud children and Freud's cherished life-long friend. Like his brother Oscar, Alfred Rie was also a participant with Freud in the Saturday evening card games held at the house of Prof. Leopold Knigstein." Jones I, p. 362; Stanford 29; Norman F46.
[With]:
FREUD. Psychoanalytische Studien an Werken der Dichtung und Kunst. Vienna, Leipzig and Zurich: Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag, 1924.
8o (240 x 153 mm). Photographic plate; text illustrations. Original printed tan wrappers (cover and title-page silked and with tears repaired and segments supplied, marginal repairs throughout); blue cloth folding case.
FIRST EDITION of this "collection of the psychoanalytical studies of artistic and literary works, originally published in various journals between 1908 and 1919." PRESENTATION COPY, inscribed by Freud at top of title-page: "Herrn Prof. J. Tandler [illegible] d. Verf." "The recipient, Profesor Tandler, was the Austrian Undersecretary of the Minister of Health, who had served with Freud in 1920 on the administration committee of a Viennese convalescent home for children. In 1925 Freud appealed to Tandler on behalf of Theodor Reik, who had been forbidden to practice psychoanalysis by the Municipal Council of Vienna on the ground that he was not a physician" (Norman). Jones III, p. 5; Stanford 54; Norman F113. (2)