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B. Paris (1977)
Hamlet and his Problems: A Horneyan Analysis, 21
B. Paris (1984)
“His scorn I approve”: The self-effacing DesdemonaThe American Journal of Psychoanalysis, 44
Betty Glad (1973)
Contributions of psychobiography
B.J. Paris (1981)
The inner conflicts ofMeasure for MeasureCentennial Rv., 25
R. Tucker (1977)
The Georges' Wilson Reexamined: An Essay on PsychobiographyAmerican Political Science Review, 71
K. Butery (1982)
The contributions of horneyan psychology to the study of literatureThe American Journal of Psychoanalysis, 42
B. Paris (1976)
A Psychological Approach to Fiction: Studies in Thackeray, Stendhal, George Eliot, Dostoevsky, and Conrad
Jean Baker Miller (1976)
Toward a New Psychology of Women
B.J. Paris (1976)
Experiences of Thomas Hardy
B.J. Paris (1989)
: Shakespeare's ideal solution
B. Paris (1982)
Bargains with fate: The case ofmacbethThe American Journal of Psychoanalysis, 42
B. Paris (1976)
Herzog the man: An analytic view of a literary figureThe American Journal of Psychoanalysis, 36
Catherine Lewis (1985)
Poet, Friend, and poetry: The idealized image of love in Shakespeare's sonnetsThe American Journal of Psychoanalysis, 45
Nancy Clinch (1973)
The Kennedy Neurosis
Robert C. Tucker (1973)
Stalin as Revolutionary
Nolan Miller, L. Thompson, R. Winnick (1977)
Robert Frost: The Later Years, 1938-1963Antioch Review, 35
P. Eldredge (1982)
Karen horney andclarissa: The tragedy of neurotic prideThe American Journal of Psychoanalysis, 42
Dee Garrison (1981)
Karen Horney and FeminismSigns: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 6
H.N. Hirsch (1981)
The Enigma of Felix Frankfurter
B.J. Paris (1978)
The two selves of Rodion RaskolnikovGradiva, 1
Betty Glad (1980)
Jimmy Carter
Susan Quinn (1987)
A Mind of Her Own: The Life of Karen Horney
Carol Gilligan (1982)
In a Different Voicea Different Voice; citation_publication_date=1982; citation_id=CR6; citation_author=Carol Gilligan; citation_publisher=Harvard University Press
R. Tucker (1965)
The Dictator and TotalitarianismWorld Politics, 17
Benjamin Spencer, L. Thompson (1967)
Robert Frost: The Early Years, 1874-1915American Literature, 39
J. Huffman (1982)
A psychological critique of american cultureThe American Journal of Psychoanalysis, 42
Karen Horney (1950)
Neurosis and Human Growth
citation_title=Third Force Psychology and the Study of Literature, citation_publication_date= (1986)
Third Force Psychology and the Study of Literature
B. Paris (1978)
Horney's theory and the study of literatureThe American Journal of Psychoanalysis, 38
Robert C. Tucker (1965)
. The dictator and totalitarianism.World Politics
Nancy Chodorow (1978)
The Reproduction of Mothering
B. Paris (1984)
Iago's Motives : a Horneyan analysisRevue Belge De Philologie Et D Histoire, 62
Susan Rudnick Jacobson (1987)
Review ofThe Feminist Legacy of Karen Horney by Marcia WestkottAm. J. Psychoanal., 47
Robert C. Tucker (1985)
A Stalin biographer's memoir
Marcia Westkott (1986)
The Feminist Legacy of Karen Horney
A. O'Connell (1980)
Karen Horney: Theorist in Psychoanalysis and Feminine PsychologyPsychology of Women Quarterly, 5
L. Thompson (1970)
Robert Frost: The Years of Triumph, 1915-1938
Sheehy Dg, L. Thompson (1986)
The poet as neurotic: the official biography of Robert Frost.American literature: a journal of literary history, criticism and bibliography, 58 3
B.J. Paris (1987)
Brutus, Cassius, and Caesar: an interdestructive triangle
B.J. Paris (1978)
Character and Conflict in Jane Austen's Novels: A Psychological Approach
B.J. Paris (1982)
Hush, hush! He's a human being: a psychological approach to HeathcliffWomen and Literature, 2
B.J. Paris (1981)
The third force psychology and the study of literature, biography, criticism, and cultureLiterary Rev., 24
B.J. Paris (1983)
Richard III: Shakespeare's first great mimetic characterAligarh J. English Stud., 8
-;-he American journal of Psychoanalysis, Vol. 49, No. 3, 1989 INTRODUCTION: INTERDISCIPLINARY APPLICATIONS OF HORNEY Bernard J. Paris, Guest Editor I concluded A Psychological Approach to Fiction: Studies in Thackeray, Stendhal, George Eliot, Dostoevsky, and Conrad (1974) by observing that if the potential of Horney's theory is to be actualized, it needs "what Freud and Jung found; co-workers in other disciplines who will apply [it] to a variety of phenomena, showing how wonderfully well [it works], and testing, refin- ing, and extending [it] in the process" (p. 290). I have endeavored to be such a co-worker. Since 1974, I have published a book on Jane Austen (1978c) and essays on Hardy (1976a), Bellow (1976b), Shakespeare (1977, 1981 b, 1982b, 1983, 1984a,b, 1987, 1989), Dostoevsky (1978a), Ibsen (1978b), Flaubert (1981a), and Emily Bront~ (1982a, 1986); I have edited Third Force in Psychol- ogy and the Study of Literature (1986), which includes Horneyan essays by others on Charlotte Bront~, Dickens, Browning, D.H. Lawrence, Graham Greene, Faulkner, and Styron (see also Butery, 1982; Eldredge, 1982; Lewis, 1985); and I have written two books on Shakespeare. 1 have tried, in the pro- cess, to show how Horney's theory can be a powerful tool
The American Journal of Psychoanalysis – Springer Journals
Published: Sep 1, 1989
Keywords: Clinical Psychology; Psychotherapy; Psychoanalysis
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