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  • ...raised, grew up, in a comfortable middle-[[class]] [[Catholic]] [[family]] in '''Montparnasse, [[Paris]]'''. ...chool, the '''Collège Stanislas'''.<ref>An ambitious student, he excelled in [[religious]] studies and [[Latin]].</ref>
    82 KB (12,528 words) - 20:43, 25 May 2019
  • ...nthal, Karen Horney, and Margarete Stegmann, the first women [[analysts]]. In June 1912 two [[other]] nonphysician women were admitted as members at larg ...ve up the presidency of the [[International Psychoanalytical Association]] in 1913 and was supported by the Munich group.
    27 KB (3,702 words) - 08:33, 24 May 2019
  • ...he [[French]] schools—Pierre Janet, Jules Déjerine, Hippolyte Bernheim. In 1913 the Brunswick Square [[Clinic]], the first to offer [[psychotherapy]], ...]'s writings were through articles by Frederick W.H. Myers on [[hysteria]] in 1893. Myers proposed his own [[theory]] of a "subliminal" [[subconscious]]
    24 KB (3,589 words) - 08:49, 24 May 2019
  • : [[Jacques Lacan|Lacan]] was [[born]] in [[Paris]], the first [[child]] of prosperous, bourgeois [[parents]], [[Alfr <!-- " [[Jacques Lacan|Lacan]] was born in [[Paris]] (France) (95 boulevard Beaumarchais), the first child (eldest son
    71 KB (10,839 words) - 20:42, 25 May 2019
  • ..."Heredity and the Aetiology of the Neuroses," published in French in 1896 in the Revue neurologique, the word psychoanalysis appeared for the first time ...ion of Freud's essay "The claims of psychoanalysis to scientific interest" in the Italian journal Scientia went unnoticed.
    33 KB (4,956 words) - 07:02, 8 September 2006
  • ...ical organisation in [[France]]. Founded with Freud’s [[endorsement]] in 1926, the S.P.P. is a component member of the [[International Psychoanalytical A ==History: some landmarks in the history of the development of psychoanalysis in France==
    18 KB (2,529 words) - 10:57, 1 June 2019