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S. Freud (1971)
Creative writers and day-dreaming (1908)
R. Chessick (1992)
The death instinct revisited.The Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis, 20 1
G. Gabbard (2000)
On Gratitude and GratificationJournal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 48
PSYCHOANALYSIS AT THE END O F THE THIRD MILLENNIUM RICHARD D. CHESSICK, M.D., P H .D * I t w as th e n th a t I b eg a n m y T h irty Y ears W a r ag a in st th e p ro fesso rs, th e ro u tin e y ears an d th e deaf. — H ec to r B erlio z (1885) It is appropriate at this time, having come to the end o f the third mil lennium, to review at our annual Academy o f Psychoanalysis meeting on this memorable day in May, 3000, the year opening the 31st century, what has happened to psychoanalysis. To do that I will have to first di gress'and summarize some historical trends that might be useful in ex plaining the vicissitudes o f our recently reborn discipline. The outstand ing ¿linkers in the first h alf o f the 20th century (1900-1950) when psychoanalysis came into significant prominence, devoted their intel lectual and artistic efforts to seeing behind things, an interest which died out in the second half o f that century, the so-called age o f brain
Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis – Guilford Press
Published: Dec 1, 2000
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