Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

Ida Bauer

376 bytes added, 23:56, 24 May 2019
The LinkTitles extension automatically added links to existing pages (https://github.com/bovender/LinkTitles).
'''Ida Bauer''' (1882–1945) was a [[hysteria|hysterical]] [[:Category:Famous Patients|patient]] of [[Sigmund Freud]] for [[about]] whom he [[Freud]] wrote a famous case study about "[[Fragment of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria]]" (1901), one of his notable early papers, using the psuedonym '[[Dora]]'. Dora's most [[manifest]] [[hysterical ]] [[symptom]] was [[aphonia]] ([[loss ]] of [[voice]]).
'Dora' remains one of Freud's most famous cases, and is often discussed in [[feminism|feminist]] circles because instead of taking Freud's advice, she rejected his speculations, broke off her [[therapy ]] and [[chose ]] instead to confront her tormentors (her [[father]], his lover and his lover's husband). When confronted, her tormentors confessed that she had been [[right ]] all along, and had not imagined their affairs and motivations.
Though Freud was disappointed with the results of the [[case]], he considered it an important study in the phenomenon of [[transference]].
Freud gave her the [[name ]] 'Dora' after a maid [[working ]] in the Freud house by the same name. ==External Links==;[http://www.haverford.edu/psych/ddavis/p109g/fdora.html Freud's Dora];[http://courses.washington.edu/freudlit/Dora.Notes.html Lecture Notes: Freud, "Fragment of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria ('Dora')"]
[[Category:Sigmund Freud]]
Anonymous user

Navigation menu