Difference between revisions of "Studies on Hysteria"

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'''''Studies on Hysteria''''' ([[German language|German]]: '''''Studien über Hysterie''''') was a book published in [[1895]] by [[Sigmund Freud]] and [[Josef Breuer]]. It contained a number of Breuer and Freud's case studies of "[[hysteria|hysterics]]". It included one of their most famous cases, Breuer's [[Anna O.]], which introduced the technique of [[psychoanalysis]] as a form of cure.
 
'''''Studies on Hysteria''''' ([[German language|German]]: '''''Studien über Hysterie''''') was a book published in [[1895]] by [[Sigmund Freud]] and [[Josef Breuer]]. It contained a number of Breuer and Freud's case studies of "[[hysteria|hysterics]]". It included one of their most famous cases, Breuer's [[Anna O.]], which introduced the technique of [[psychoanalysis]] as a form of cure.
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Studies on Hysteria
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Beginning in 1892, Sigmund Freud gradually abandoned the technique of hypnosis and began using the "method of cathartic abreaction" that had been described to him by his older colleague, Josef Breuer, ten years earlier. He became increasingly convinced of the sexual origin of neurotic disturbances in his patients and, uneasy over the work Pierre Janet had begun to publish (L'État mental des hystériques, 1892-1894), convinced Breuer to join him in writing a book that, by situating the origin of their research in 1881, would assure...
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[[Category:1895 books]]
 
[[Category:1895 books]]

Revision as of 07:05, 18 May 2006

Studies on Hysteria (German: Studien über Hysterie) was a book published in 1895 by Sigmund Freud and Josef Breuer. It contained a number of Breuer and Freud's case studies of "hysterics". It included one of their most famous cases, Breuer's Anna O., which introduced the technique of psychoanalysis as a form of cure.

Studies on Hysteria Beginning in 1892, Sigmund Freud gradually abandoned the technique of hypnosis and began using the "method of cathartic abreaction" that had been described to him by his older colleague, Josef Breuer, ten years earlier. He became increasingly convinced of the sexual origin of neurotic disturbances in his patients and, uneasy over the work Pierre Janet had begun to publish (L'État mental des hystériques, 1892-1894), convinced Breuer to join him in writing a book that, by situating the origin of their research in 1881, would assure...