Details
FREUD, Sigmund. [Caption title:] Bruchstck einer Hysterie-Analyse. Offprint from: Monatsschrift fr Psychiatrie und Neurologie 18 (1905). [Berlin: S. Karger, 1905].
8o (245 X 170 mm). 92 leaves, [285] 286-467 [1] pp. Original printed tan wrappers (rebacked, two chips in rear cover renewed, all with tan paper, front cover virtually detached); maroon half-morocco folding case.
FIRST SEPARATE PRINTING of the account of "Dora" (Fragments of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria), the first of Freud's important series of psychoanalytical case histories. PRESENTATION COPY to his close friend, the archaeologist Emmanuel Lwy, inscribed by Freud at the top front cover: "Herrn Prof. Loewy/mit hertzl. Gruss/Fr." This paper recounts the famous "analysis of an eighteen-year-old girl [Dora] suffering from several hysterical symptoms caused by her excessive attachment to her father, and an unwelcomed proposition from the husband of her father's mistress. Freud's analysis centered around two recurrent dreams that illuminated the sexual basis of Dora's hysteria; he published the case history 'to illustrate the value the interpretation of the dreams had for analytic treatment' (Jones II, p. 288)" (Norman). Grinstein 67; Standard edition 1905e; Stanford 38; Norman F59.
8o (245 X 170 mm). 92 leaves, [285] 286-467 [1] pp. Original printed tan wrappers (rebacked, two chips in rear cover renewed, all with tan paper, front cover virtually detached); maroon half-morocco folding case.
FIRST SEPARATE PRINTING of the account of "Dora" (Fragments of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria), the first of Freud's important series of psychoanalytical case histories. PRESENTATION COPY to his close friend, the archaeologist Emmanuel Lwy, inscribed by Freud at the top front cover: "Herrn Prof. Loewy/mit hertzl. Gruss/Fr." This paper recounts the famous "analysis of an eighteen-year-old girl [Dora] suffering from several hysterical symptoms caused by her excessive attachment to her father, and an unwelcomed proposition from the husband of her father's mistress. Freud's analysis centered around two recurrent dreams that illuminated the sexual basis of Dora's hysteria; he published the case history 'to illustrate the value the interpretation of the dreams had for analytic treatment' (Jones II, p. 288)" (Norman). Grinstein 67; Standard edition 1905e; Stanford 38; Norman F59.