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VOLUME I 1920 NUMBER 3
REACTION TO PERSONAL NAMES
by
C. P. OBERNDORF, New York.
In a previous communication! I cited several examples which
demonstrated how unpleasant emotional reaction to personal names
may result from an unconscious feeling on the part of the indi-
vidual bearing that name that it in some way revealed an inherent
weakness in personality which the individual wished to conceal.
It was also pointed out that such persons through the alteration
of their names secured an unconscious outlet for the desire to
rectify these deficiencies which they had in some way come to
identify with their names.
This view is the reverse of theories commonly advanced that
the name is really an influencial factor which operates as a con-
siderable stimulus or detriment to the accomplishments of its
bearer. Such a general conception is exemplified by the follo-
wing quotation from Walsh’s “Handbook of Literary Curiosities”
— “The names that have become famous are those which have
a sonorous and stately ring. — One can understand how an ob-
scure Corsican with such a name as Napoleon Bonaparte might
have conquered the world. Herbert Lythe becomes famous as
Maurice Barrymore — and John Rowlandson would never have
become a great explorer unless he had first changed his name
to Henry M. Stanley.”
In order to test the validity of this theory, I asked my humble
! Psychoanalytic Review, Vol. V. No. 1, p. 47.
223 15
224 Cc. P. OBERNDORF
boot-black, who usually responds to the name of Joe, for his real
name and I discovered it to be sufficiently resounding, namely,
Salvatore Botta. So, too, Edwin Booth, bearing a simple name,
achieved a fame histrionically quite equal to that of Henry Irving
who changed his name from that of John H. Brodribb. Few
persons would contend Booth’s brother, John Wilkes Booth, who
assassinated President Lincoln was in any way influenced by his
name to his infamous act.
Probably Captain John Smith of Virginia and plain Henry
Hudson will live in the annals of history quite as long as Henry
M. Stanley. Moreover, Stanley’s own name, Rowlandson, is not
without recognition in the world of art.
Even the psycho-analytical investigators have, it seems to me,
quite overestimated the importance which the name may lend in
the selection of a profession, when they call attention to such
coincidences as a lawyer being named Sharp or an ice-man,
Frost, and intimate that the choice resulted from the name.! Cer-
tainly innumerable examples to the contrary also exist. Doctors
by the name of Ill, Sour, etc. come to mind, and the fact that
we occasionally encounter a Dr. Sweet or Dr. Cutter cannot be
considered very convincing proof of the relationship of profession
and name. Some more potent reason than that of a name must
exist, which influences a man called Ford to become an auto-
mobile manufacturer instead of a bridge builder. Reference to
the classified telephone directory reveals a very moderate coin-
cidence of any connection between name and profession.
I appreciate that in many cases the mental mechanism insti-
gating a change of names is actually simpler than in the examples
I shall present. In some instances the change may invoke favo-
rable comment.? At times the object is very evident to the ordi-
nary observer and is interpreted by him as an attempt to conceal
a personal infirmity reflected by the name. Thus, it was noticed
that when Germany and German names became unpopular in
the United States during the world war, the opportunity of em-
: sist Silberer, Mensch und Name, Zentralblatt fiir Psydoanalyse. Jahrg. Ill.
* The following extract from Les Lettres (Paris, April 1, 1920) illustrates
this view:
Sir Charles Walston ou le Wilsonien optimiste.
Sir Charles Walston est un enfant de la guerre. Il est né, en 1918, de Sir
Charles Waldstein, par une operation spirituelle, identique a la transmutation
REACTION TO PERSONAL NAMES 225
bracing this excuse to change the name was utilised almost
exclusively by Jews, and not exclusively by those with names of
German origin. Moreover, they showed scant inclination to adopt
other names than those of Puritanic origin. Very few selected
new names of Russian, Italian, French or Hebraic origin. Surely
the latter would have precluded any identification with the German
quite as conclusively as those which it was fashionable to assume.
However, even in the adoption of new names, where the
unconscious motive is not identical with the conscious, those chosen
are apt to reflect a compromise reaction, so that very rarely does
the new name differ completely from the former one, in other
words John Smith would very rarely become Tom Brown, but
possibly James Smithers or something similar.
While it would be futile to conjecture what the underlying
forces in each case were which impelled the well-known persons
previously mentioned to choose pseudo-names, the following
examples may throw some light on the mechanisms in general.
In the course of the analysis of patients the following instances
of clinging to the maiden name after marriage, and of the adop-
tion of a fanciful name have come to my notice and all seem to
substantiate the point of view which I expressed in my previous
paper.
A patient, aged thirty, under analysis for a compulsion neu-
rosis, whose name before marriage was Irma B. Frank married a
distant cousin by the name of Frank. Instead of changing her
name as is customary under such circumstances to Irma F. Frank,
she continued to call herself Irma B. Frank, because, according
to her explanation, she possessed a very pretty silver-mounted
monogram belt-buckle on which it would have been very incon-
venient to change the initials. Besides she saw no reason why
she should “burden herself with the name Frank twice.”
des Saxe-Cobourg et Gotha en Windsor du britannisme le plus pur. Ces
affirmations symboliques de nationalités, cette prise plus rigoureuse de con-
science collective, cette élection volontariste d’un idéal qui s’exteriorise par
de nouveaux sons patronymiques, n’a rien que de trés légitime et de naturel.
Aussi bien, l’origine allemande de Sir Charles Walston était-elle déja filtrée,
si je puis hasarder cette image saugrenue, par une implantation solide en
terre americaine.
15*
226 C. P, OBERNDORF
An investigation of the mental life of Mrs. Frank disclosed that
she had never quite succeeded in attaining her conceptions of
frank dealing. As a matter of fact, especially in the sexual field
and in her animosity to her parents, her thoughts were far from
the ethical standard which she felt it incumbent upon herself to
maintain. In spite of her regard for the truth, Irma could never
be quite as open or honorable as she desired to be.
At times when puns were made, such as the name Irma
B. Frank inevitably invites, e. g. “Irma, B. Frank in thought and
action” she felt both uncomfortable and complimented.
Furthermore, there is an ambivalence to her name which was
early discovered. Her initials, I.B.F., if transposed spelt F.I.B. (Fib).
So, after all, the name reflected the contradictory elements in her
personality.
The “F.I.B.” which lay well concealed in the name (as in
the personality) afforded a certain unconscious satisfaction in
actually revealing the truth if the outsider were clever enough to
detect it (which was very unlikely). On the other hand the sup-
portive qualities associated with the appelation “Irma B. Frank”
acted as a constant prop and also as a warning, not to deviate
from frank action. Thus an unconscious desire for reassurance in
her struggle to live according to her ideals of: sincerity and to
overcome her feeling of inherent deceit, found expression in her
maiden name, and unconsciously induced her to cling to it, quite
in contradistinction to her usual tendency to conform strictly to
established conventions. Being constantly reminded through her
name, Irma B. Frank, she thereby received a certain compensatory
solace for her repeated failures in personal probity. Of course,
the obvious play on words in this instance attains a determining
importance only because of its unconscious personal valuation to
the patient. |
I.
| One day a patient whose name I had entered in my card
index as Nellie Hochstein (this is an Equivalent name) had
occasion to write to me and I was surprised to find that she
signed herself Nelye Hochstein. When I t
why she had adopted such an unusual
name, she replied that she had originall
ook occasion to inquire
spelling for her given
y done so as a girlish
REACTION TO PERSONAL NAMES 227
prank and had retained the custom. The palpable attempt to
disguise the perfectly good name of Nellie, while the Hochstein,
which because of its German origin did not stand in great esteem
with the American public about that time (during the great war),
remained intact, caused me to investigate.
The patient was born in Wisconsin of a family which had
attained a considerable local esteem and social position. In fact
during her youth, her father had been one of the prominent and
wealthy men of the community. Later unfortunate business reverses
caused a loss of his fortune but at a great personal financial
sacrifice he had retained his good name.
The patient had dwelt repeatedly on the nobleness of her
father’s action at the time of his financial misfortune and though
her emotions toward him were violently ambivalent, . her love
took the form of reverence and pride in him. Her personal regard
for him and his position caused her to be proud of being a
Hochstein notwithstanding the fact that here in New York the
name of Hochstein carried with it no semblance of prestige.
This regard for her last name made: the fantastic spelling ot
her first name all the more striking. It is not an uncommon
occurrence for the spelling of common names, such as Mamie
and Catherine, to be altered to Mayme or Katheryne and in most
cases it is probably done with the idea of lending distinction to
persons of those names who feel that they lack it. The patient
in question, Nelye, had been, since the age of four or five, a
constant and frequent masturbator. In the household, the tyrannical
though righteous father, had ruled with uncompromising severity
and had allowed his daughters little social freedom, especially
with men. Sex had been regarded in the home as something
ordinary and vulgar, and my patient, through her indulgence in
masturbation, identified herself with such a class of people. Nellie,
to her, signified a name borne by ordinary persons and those who
are sexually free!, such as, “Nellie, the Beautiful Cloak Model”.
The patient could not tolerate being associated even in name
1 As an example of the desire to have the name harmonize with the
characteristics of its bearer, the following from the New York Worfd is
illustrative. Here, however, the parents are taking the unwonted precaution
of deferring in their choice for the sake of accuracy: —
SHE IS ‘ITSA HERR’.
A baby girl was born to Mr. and Mrs. Dougal Herr of Caldwell, N. j.,
928 | C. P. OBERNDORF
with anything which connoted to her mind the ordinary (the
sexual). She thought that even through the association by name,
what she considered to be her depravity might be revealed to
the minds of others. Hence, she became Nelye. It was not sur-
prising that suddenly during the course of the analysis she reverted
to plain Nellie Hochstein, inasmuch as with the acquisition of
tolerance for sex the necessity for the mask disappeared.
Il.
A French artist who had achieved considerable fame under
the name which he now bears, informed me during the course of
an analysis for a compulsion neurosis that he had changed his
surname, which was originally Thomas, because of the ridicule to
which that name exposed him. He had retained his original given
Christian name. Inasmuch as Thomas, as surname, is not with-
out lustre (compare Rowlandson—Stanley) even in his own field
and in his own country, ¢. g. Ambrose Thomas the composer,
this reaction seemed to be incongruous. In order to interpret this
aversion to Thomas it is necessary to trace briefly the patient’s
previous history. ;
He was born in one of the large French cities where his father
conducted a small jewelry store. He-describes his father as an
indolent and autocratic, though incompetent man, who continually
made excuses for his own short-comings and procrasti-
nations. The patient, who was intimately attached to his mother,
began, while still a boy, to resent the abusive attitude of his father
toward his mother during their frequent domestic wrangles.
After years of discord with his father, the patient left home
at nineteen years, following a violent quarrel. His virulent anta-
gonism to his father persisted up to the time of the latter’s death
many years later, and, in my opinion, may have formed an
auxiliary motive for not wishing to bear his father’s name, but
not the primary one. As is usual, in such cases, a more potent
three weeks ago. The parents were unable
concluded to wait several years and name
and temperament. In filing the birth cert
gave the name of the child temporarily,
is a Hoboken attorney. His wife is the
Garrison.
to decide on a name so they
the child according to her traits
ificate with the Town Clerk they
as Itsa Herr (It’s a Herr). Mr. Herr
daughter of Supreme Court Justice
REACTION TO PERSONAL NAMES 229
personal reason appears to have been the determining factor. It
seems to me that this interpretation is supported by the fact that
the patient did not change his name immediately on severing
connections with his father’s household but five years later.
Quite aside from the patient’s antagonism to his father, he
developed a feeling of inferiority determined in part by the fact
that he had certain girlish traits. At least he thought that he
exhibited them. Moreover, in primary school through comparing
his genitals with those of the other boys, he recognised that his
penis differed in shape from their’s. This defect was later recogni-
sed as a phimosis. Because of the pain caused by his phimosis
he was extremely slow and at times actually unsuccessful in
obtaining an ejaculation when he masturbated. He lived in hopes,
however, that the physical deformity would in some vague way be
rectified with increasing years and at about the age of eighteen,
he formed the conclusion that intercourse would cure his phimosis.
However, his frequent attempts at intercourse (for unconscious
reasons, namely, fear of the father and intolerable maternal incest
fancies! were unsatisfactory and he reverted to masturbation.
Later he indulged in both active and passive homosexual mastur-
bation with boys at the military academy to which he had been
assigned as instructor during his service in the French Army. About
this time of his life he changed his name from Thomas.
In the French slang, Thoma is equivalent of our word “pot”
or chamber. Already during his college days some of the students
had called him “Thoma” with some derision. While this had
annoyed him, when he entered the army his name became
unendurable to him, for his comrades would jocularly greet him
with the chant:
“Vide, Thoma(s), vide latus
Vide pedes, vide manus
Alleluia, alleluia.”
The old Latin biblical chant is literally translated, “See, O
Thomas, see his flanks, see his feet, see his hands, hallelulia,
hallelulia”.
However, in French vide is the imperative of the verb meaning
1 Patient once remarked: “I often dream of my mother and she is the
woman beside me that my wife ought to be. This woman has the characte-
ristics of my mother but it is in the rédle of my wife”.
230 C. P. OBERNDORF
to empty. Thus, Vide Thomas signifies “you must empty Thomas”.
(Thoma) 7. ¢., the chamber.
While the rest of the phrase had little significance, apparently,
the idea of emptying of the damber (Thomas) seemed to be
sufficient to annoy the patient intolerably.
However, the secret of the annoyance could not rest entirely
in the connotation of Thomas with chamber. The patient readily
acquiesced to the fact when I pointed out to him that the English
names equivalent of the French slang Thoma (chamber) such as
Chamberlain or Chambers or even Potts are respected and give
their bearers no cause for shame. The real reason of the aversion
seemed to be more closely associated with the “Vide” than the
“Thoma”. This was corroborated by a curious slip of the pen
which the patient made.
Inasmuch as I was not familiar with the Latin chant, I reque-
sted that my patient write it which he did as follows:
Vide Thomas, vide latus
Vide pedes, vide manu
Alleluia, alleluia.
Now manu is the ablative in the declension of manus, meaning
by hand. When I pointed out to the patient that he had written
the ablative singular, manu, instead of the accusative plural, manus,
he concurred that it could surely not be through ignorance as
his Latin had always been exceptionally good but, that it must
have been a slip of the pen.
In other words, the disagreeable implication in the taunt rests
in “you must empty Thomas” (himself) reflected by “Vide manu”
(you must empty by hand) which brought to his mind the mor-
tifying habit of masturbation.
He had constantly feared during his student days that his
masturbation might be discovered. At the military academy he
lived in dread that the cadets might reveal his practices with
them to his superior officers. Thus, the whole idea of emptying
by hand had become extremely repugnant. The association of the
Thoma was secondary but it was far easier to rectify the secon-
dary association than the fundamental habit. Curiously enough the
new name he selected when he changed his name is best trans-
lated by the English word “Alter”.
THE REVERSAL OF THE LIBIDO-SIGN! IN DELUSIONS OF
PERSECUTION
by
AUG. STARCKE, Den Dolder, Holland.
It is well known that in delusions of persecution the figure ot
the loved one reappears as the “persecutor”. As a rule it is more
or less disguised: for instance, instead of the beloved father there
emerges the persecuting superior. Freud has called this phenomenon
the return of the repressed libido, and more especially its return
with a reversal of the sign; that is to say that what was repressed
in the shape of love returns as hatred. This hatred is projected,
and represents the content of the delusion.
The essential condition that must be fulfilled before such a
reversal of sign can take place is naturally to be found in some
attitude of ambivalency. But the question of its particular deter-
minants remains to be discussed.
According to my observations, the content of the delusion is
frequently anal persecution.? Patients often complain of all sorts
of other tortures, of radiations, etc., or simply of being teased or
injured by some particular person. But even in these cases, if their
confidence can be won, they may unexpectedly confess, with every
sign of their surrendering some important secret, that, apart from
all this, the essence of the matter consists in an inconceivable
piece of villainy, which cannot even be spoken of, and can only
be indicated by hints and gestures. Here are one or two in-
stances:
An elderly female patient (a clinical mixed type, with features
of manic-depressive insanity and hypochondriacal and _ nihilistic
delusions of persecution) complained among other things that they
had “turned her the wrong way round”. On being asked the
1 [Sign CVorzeitden) is used in the mathematical sense of a plus or minus
prefix. Transl.]
2 My colleague, Dr. van Ophuijsen, informs me that he has independently
pointed out the connection between persecution and anal-erotism.
231
232 AUG. STARCKE
meaning of this expression, she replied, apparently in i an absent-
minded way and without reference to the question: They have
taken me through the little door; people go through the big door,
though. People stay with their own husbands and at the big door.
People don’t go through the little door with neck-twisters”’. (What
do you mean by the little door?) “The back door”. Here she hit
herself on the buttocks. “No real husband does this with his wife”.
“People don’t let themselves be turned the wrong way”.
The second case is that of a male patient who collected corks
with great assiduity. He had already been through several attacks
of mania and one phase of melancholia, but in the meantime had
developed clearly systematized ideas of persecution, these were as
a rule dissimulated, but occasionally broke out during his emo-
tional attacks. One day, after shutting the door and looking round
to see that no one was there, he explained in a whisper that the
purpose of the corks was to protect him “against it”; there were
some very strange persons; people didn’t want him to have anything
to do with women; so that in case of necessity he could shut
up the opening with the corks, so that people shouldn’t un-
awares..... — he completed the words with an unambiguous
gesture.
In very many cases patients complain that people want to turn
them into “homosexuals” or want to commit “sodomy” with them.
By this they do not mean the choice of an object of the same sex,
but paederastia.
This core of the delusion which is kept so secret is as a rule
concerned with anal acts of lust and violence. After having spoken
openly about it the patients often feel relieved, but unfortunately
they also often effect a transference of the delusion, as a result
of which the physician appears as the persecutor, or is even honoured
with an unremitting attachment.
The circumstances which accompany the appearance of this
transference (or, clinically speaking, this extension of the delusional
system to the recent environment) make it extremely probable
that an unconscious /dentification of the loved object with the
skybalum (faeces) was present in the first instance, and that this
identification provides the more precise basis for the special
ambivalency of the paranoic constitution.
The skyba/um is the primary (real) persecutor; it commits anal
acts of violence which are often at the same time acts of pleasure.
REVERSAL OF THE LIBIDO-SIGN IN DELUSIONS OF PERSECUTION 233
It is responsible for one of the most primitive attitudes ot ambi-
valency, for in regard to it pain and pleasure often make their
appearance in very rapid succession. This primary ambivalency is
subsequently strengthened (secondary ambivalency) by the people
in charge of the child in connection with the process of
cleaning; since punishment for dirtiness or praise for orderliness
in evacuation results automatically in hatred or love as the case
may be.
According to the fundamental laws ot memory, the attitude of
the libido, positive and negative by turns, holds good for the
imagines of the whole situation, that is to say, to the relevant
part of the child’s body (or more accurately to its excrement)
as well as to the person who is actively looking after the child.
The ambivalency of feeling directed towards the latter is bound
to exercise an important influence on the later development of
object love, and it will no doubt determine further conditions for
the production of the delusion. The study of the subject is,
however, rendered difficult, owing to the circumstance that for this
purpose it is absolutely necessary to take into account the “normal”
delusional. phenomena or systematic constructions (science, re-
ligion, etc.), which are psychologically closely related to delusions
or identical with them.
The later effects in memory of the events connected with de-
faecation in earliest childhood result in a predisposition to a sub-
sequent identification with the sfy4a/um of (1) the child’s own body
and (2) the person in charge of it. The character of those com-
ponents of narcissism which are derived from anal-erotism will be
positive or negative according as the child receives more praise
or more blame in this connection. Negative narcissism finds its
pathological application in delusions of inferiority, which often
show a trace of anal-erotism.
According to Freud’s biological formula, delusions of grandeur
are the regression of sublimated homosexuality to narcissism. The
above considerations may lead to an additional requirement, na-
mely, that this narcissism should have an. anal-erotic origin. They
are strengthened by particular experience, which shows that de-
lusions of persecution are as often accompanied by delusions of
inferiority as by delusions of grandeur, and even by extraordinary
mixtures of the two. This would be explicable by the inherent
ambivalency of anal-erotic narcissism.
234 AUG. STARCKE
Freud’s formula might then be amplified in this way: Part at
least of the sublimated homosexuality regresses to anal-erotism.
In so far as the latter is positive it is used for reconstruction in
the shape of delusions of grandeur, and in so far as it is ne-
gative it is diverted by being projected as a delusion of per-
secution.
The second phase appearing by itself would be responsible for
building up a suspicious character.
In all this I take no account of any fundamental distinction
between melancholic, schizophrenic, and paranoic delusions of per-
secution. Conditions are frequently met with which can as easily
be classified in one group as in another. Since Freud has enabled
us to study the elementary syndrome analytically, we no longer
have any excuse for the game of pouring cases out of one
diagnostical pot into another. There is only this to be said of the
Systematic division of the psychoses: all actual cases are highly
variegated mixtures of every sort of. syndrome in every sort of
relation. The recognized clinical types or “diseases” only represent
a series of typical combinations.
ON THE ORIGIN OF THE FEELING OF PERSECUTION}?
by
J. H. W. VAN OPHUIJSEN, The Hague.
In the course of his practice the psycho-analyst is brought into
constant touch with the problem of delusions of persecution. Either
he has occasion to examine a paranoic patient or his mental pro-
ducts, or he is obliged to recognize that the pathological pheno-
mena which he observes in his neurotic patients are more or less
completely analogous to paranoic symptoms. Indeed, psycho-
analytical literature already includes a considerable number of
contributions to the solution of this problem, Freud’s papers being
the most important among them. In these the person of the per-
secutor, the origin of the delusion, and the nature of the persecution,
have been the subject of enquiry; nor has there been any lack of
allusions to the question which I wish to discuss here, namely the
origin of the feeling of being persecuted.
This feeling is a symptom which, in a mitigated form, is never
absent from a case of psychoneurosis, but which must of course
be distinguished from the delusion of being persecuted. With this
feeling I include the neurotic’s ideas of reference, his common fear
of being attacked from behind, his not being able to bear anyone
walking behind him in the street or on the stairs, his dreams of
persecution, etc. All these symptoms have in common the un-
canny feeling of which the paranoic also complains, or to which
he reacts in some other way.
Experience has brought me to the view that this feeling can
be traced back to the anal complex, and has led me to expect
that psychiatrists will be able to confirm this theory of its origin
in the case of their patients. I give below some accounts of
cases which may serve as specimens of my observations on
this point.
1 Lecture delivered at a meeting of the Dutch Psycho-Analytical Society
on March 30th., 1919, and before the Congress of Medicine and Natural
Philosophy at Leyden on April 26th., 1919.
235
236 J. H. W. VAN OPHUIJSEN
A young man who was suffering from attacks of morbid anxiety,
which were chiefly of a hypochondriacal character, one day told
me the following dream: He was waiting for the steam tram near
the corner of a street which he knew quite well. Although it was
very late at night, the tram was to take him to a neighbouring
health resort. While he was waiting there, he suddenly became
aware that some object had been thrown at him — he did not
know from where — and had hit him in the back. He looked
round, but could not catch sight of any one. He then went round
the corner, and found himself face to face with two men. They
were dressed like athletes, and approached him menacingly with
sticks in their hands. One of them put his arm round him, and he
begged for mercy.
When he woke up it occurred to him that the affect which
accompanied the dream had been noticeably less disagreeable than
might have been expected from its content; hé was only very much
annoyed at his unmanly behaviour. He had behaved almost like a
girl who was being sexually assaulted. The half affectionate way
in which the arm was put round him made him think of a homo-
sexual assault, and he accordingly interpreted the sticks as a male
genital. In addition to this, it turned out that he thought that
what had been thrown at him must have been something dirty —
dung, perhaps —, so that no possible doubt remained as to the
form of the assault.
I must also explain that the question of what people said about
him was of great importance to the patient. This peculiarity pro-
vided the occasion for the dream. The evening before, he had
been annoyed at his behaviour at a large gathering in exactly
the same way as he was after the dream. People might have said
disparaging things about him “behind his back” — (“might have
thrown mud [dung] at him”).
A second patient declared of himself that people were nothing
to him: he was quite different from ordinary people, and did not
have to bother about them. In consequence of this he was re-
latively lonely, and yet his sense of his own importance was not
quite enough to help him over his loneliness. One day he had the
following dream:
. He was standing on some rising ground, which gave him a clear
view all round him. While he stood there, a number of dogs came
at him and pressed up against him and caressed him with ‘signs
ON THE ORIGIN OF THE FEELING OF PERSECUTION 237
of friendliness. When this began to inconvenience him he drew a
revolver and shot some of the animals down. In this way he re-
lieved himself from the situation.
I will proceed at once to the heart of the matter, and quote
from his associations to the effect that the dogs reminded him of
wolves, and that his father, who died when he was still a small
boy, used to tell him a great many enthralling stories about wolves.
He called wolves father-animals, just as he used to call snakes
mother-animals. The conduct of the animals in the dream reminded
him of the behaviour of a number of people, both men and women,
whom he had snubbed off from his acquaintance. The phrase in
the dream “to press up against him” called up the associations
“press of people” [crowd] and “pressure”. He now mentioned that
on the day before the dream, or on the day before that, he had
had to collect his stool for the purpose of a blood-examination.
This association showed exactly what sort of “press” was meant in
the dream; and this was confirmed by the next part of the dream,
in which he relieved himself from his oppressive situation by
shooting some of the animals down. It was evidently a question
of an evacuation of the bowels, and this would fit in with the
occasion of the dream. The occasion of the dream may also
sufficiently explain why the “persecutors” were visible in this case.
The ambivalency of the “persecutor” is clearer, too, than in the
first dream. The most important point, however, is that “persecutor*
and skybalum are simply treated as equivalent things. | pass over
a large number of important details in the dream, but I must
mention in this connection that the functioning of his bowels was
a subject of the greatest interest to the patient in his early youth,
and to his parents as well. I have already hinted in the case of
the first patient that he was very much occupied with his physical
health, and it is naturally not surprising that his motions played
a specially important part in this preoccupation.
In the second dream the figure of the father came tolight through
the dreamer’s association. Although it is not strictly relevant, I
cannot omit to mention that a reference to the father inevitably
came up in the analysis of the first dream too. The first patient’s
father was also dead; a Dutch expression for dying is “going round
the corner” (het hoekje omgaan). Moreover the patient was a con-
vinced spiritualist, but had not recently ventured to attend a sgance
because he was afraid it might do him harm.
238 J. H. W. VAN OPHUIJSEN
The first example has suggested to us that the persecution may
be an assault from behind (directed at the anus) on the part of
persons (fathers) with (homo)sexual intentions, who are at first in-
visible because they are localized behind the back. The second
example points to the possibility that the feeling of being
assaulted (persecuted) may be a displacement outwards of the
feeling of being disturbed by the sensations called up by the
skybalum. In that case the persecutor would be the persont-
fication of the skybalum.
A third example ought to make the matter still more clear.
This time the patient really had grounds for being concerned as
to what people were saying about him; but apart from this he ex-
hibited something not unlike delusions of reference. From his youth
upwards he had suffered from every sort of morbid anxiety and
had very often had anxiety dreams. One day he described some
hypnagogic visions, of which only the third is of interest to us.
In these visions he appeared to himself to be a boy. It seemed
at first as though he heard his parents going into their bedroom,
and saw the light of the candle shining into his room through the
crack of the door. (This appearance of the light played a part in
his fear of burglars). Then it seemed as though he went into a
room, no doubt his parents’ bedroom, or as though he was
standing on the threshold, and saw something that had to do with
blood. Finally, he was looking into a dark place, out of which all
sorts of terrible shapes appeared.
This dark place seemed to him at first to be a cupboard; and
he saw coming out at him all the hideous forms which had so
often persecuted him in his dreams and which had always changed
with the circumstances of his life. I need not name them all, and
I will only mention that at this point it again occurred to the
patient — for the recollection had appeared before — that when
he was a child he had seen his father’s genitals as his father
was getting out of bed. He had been very much frightened at the
sight, and overcome with terror had asked his mother what the
thing could be.
The dark, cupboard turned into a W. C., and the W. C. into
the opening of the wastepipe. Then followed the series of anxiety
ideas connected with this subject (such as the fear of falling in, etc.)
which are so familiar to every analyst. But in the same sitting the
patient went a step further and explained that 47s morbidly anxious
ON THE ORIGIN OF THE FEELING OF PERSECUTION 239
interest in the W. C. wasa further development of his interest in
his own waste-tube and in what might come out of it. 1 do not
know whether he ever made use of a looking-glass to gratify this
interest. Even without any such intermediate step it is easy to
assume that a projection of his rectal and anal sensations took
place. The most remarkable feature of the projection was the emer-
gence of anxiety.
I have no doubt that these facts have found many other ob-
servers. And if these observations turn out to be correct, it will
be the task of the psychiatrist! to discover whether the anal per-
secution is not also the primary fact in the case of those who
suffer from delusions of persecution.
1 Meanwhile Dr. Starcke (Den Dolder, Holland) has confirmed my sus-
picion, and has informed me that he expressed this view some years ago at
a meeting of Dutch analysts. (Cf. the article bearing upon the subject in the
present number of this Journal).
16
A CASE OF WAR SHOCK RESULTING FROM SEX-
INVERSION
by
C.W.S. DAVIES-JONES, Ashhurst Hospital, Littlemore, Near Oxford.
I propose to quote from the notes of a case — not so much
from the point of view of discussing the actual conditions present,
as of a means of putting before you some of the main points in
the technique of Psycho-Analysis, which I consider to be fairly
well illustrated therein.
The patient is a young man of twenty-six years of age, of
more than average intelligence, and distinctly showing a _ well-
marked degree of the “Artistic Temperament”. He complains of
a terror of “Something” lurking in the dark, especially in his
bedroom, from which he has been compelled, at times, to rush
out in a state bordering upon panic. He has never been able to
sleep without a light on for more than two years. Subsidiary
symptoms are forgetfulness and inability to concentrate.
In treating the case, I resolved to begin with an analysis—
the patient proving to be unsuitable for approach by hypnosis. In
the preliminary discussion, the patient connected the occurrence
of the symptoms, somewhat vaguely, with the following war
experience :—
During the Somme Battle, while near Delville Wood, he
remembered noticing the unburied head of a soldier which he
had frequently to pass. In doing so, he always avoided looking at
the face which—to quote his own words—‘“Bore an expression
of extreme horror and disgust”, and thereby greatly impressed
him. One night, however, despite his usual precautions not to
approach the head too closely, he felt his foot tread upon it, and
was instantly filled with a great revulsion of feeling, as he felt what
he imagined to be the brains “Squelching” around his foot.
At the outset, the case would appear to present the ordinary
features of “War Shock”. In a very short while, however, it be-
240
A CASE OF WAR SHOCK RESULTING FROM SEX-INVERSION 241
came evident to me that the symptoms sprang from a previous
experience, and were founded upon a truly “Freudian” basis.
In commencing the analysis, the word-association test was
applied. The patient was instructed to give without criticism, the
first word or thought which came to his mind in response to a
given word. The “Reaction-time” was noted with a stop-watch,
the average working out at 5 to 7 seconds, exceptions being notRC
to be as long as 30 seconds, or more.
Here, I should like to point out the necessity on the part of
the analyst of allowing no preconceived idea as to the condition
present in the patient to bias him, and, also, of being cautious in
giving hard and fast interpretations or specific meanings to any symbols
which may be brought to light during the process of analysis. If
the analyst will always bear in mind the fact that it is the
patient's duty to provide the material, and the analyst’s duty
to examine that material in the light of the patient’s associations,
these pitfalls will be avoided.
It is, obviously, useless to attempt to work in any meaning
other than that present in the patient’s associations. Let the
patient be so guided and led by the analyst that he provides the
interpretations, and let the analyst always be very much alive to
his own “Repressions” and “Complexes” (Upon this latter necessity
depends the whole reason why those who intend to use this
method should themselves be analysed).
But, with the best intentions, this danger is often with diffi-
culty avoided. Frequently, one is tempted to shorten the work by
jumping to conclusions. This is well instanced in the following
details of part of the word-association test. The point will be more
easily understood, I think, if I tabulate as follows: —
STIMULUS TIME RESPONSE ANALYST’S INFERENCE
Dear 15 Love letters. He treasures some
. love-letters
To kiss 7 The dreamt-ot In some way kisses
kis;es are idealized
Pure 15 It’s the “Gal” He has been jilted.
! I had.
Relying upon the apparent soundness of my own inferences
(and not then realizing that the words were, im reality, touching
upon a repression in my own unconscious) I, later on, asked the
16*
242 C. W. S. DAVIES-JONES
patient if he could recall his reply to “Pure”. I was interested to
note that he had developed a complete Amnesia for the word.
This clinched the matter to my mind—not only had he been
jilted, but the episode was so painful, that he was still making
efforts, with success, to forget it.
I then told him that I thought his trouble had an important
relation to the fact that his engagement had been broken off. His
reply was startling in his denial of ever having had a love-affair
at all! Moreover, he now remembered, in a flash, that his reply
to “Pure”, had been “Sir Galahad”. I then realized the unconscious
play upon words which my inferences had led me to make.
This tendency has already been pointed out by Freud. It was
J who had changed “Sir Galahad” into the “Gal I had”. Later on,
this word proved to be the main key to the whole situation.
Proceeding with the work, the patient “blocked” for 27 seconds
upon the word “Head”. His resistance, in other words, became
distressingly evident. At last he said “R. B.’s head”, and as a recall
word gave “the head in the trench”; I then urged him to associate
freely upon the latter.
After a long time spent in overcoming his resistance, and with
marked emotional stress, he cried out “My head!” Urged to
continue, he proceeded to tell the following story—not without
frequent pauses and considerable difficulty. Briefly stated, it amounts
to this: — !
As a boy of sixteen or seventeen, a lady staying at his home,
as the guest of his mother, entered his bedroom one night, while
he slept. The first thing he remembered was that he could feel
her hand touching his body. She then attempted to induce him
to perform the act of coitus. He, however, drew the bed-clothes
around him, and, whispering, told her to gO away.
Goaded to frenzy by his refusal, and springing upon the bed in
such a way as to pinion him down with her knees, she forcibly
performed the act of Cunnilingus upon him.
Fear, and the knowledge that this outrage was being committed
upon him by a guest of the house, prevented his crying out. To
struggle was impossible on account of the bed-clothes and his
position. The effect of such a trauma substantiated well the
emotional storm which accompanied his association “My head”.
Furthermore, it ~was soon possible to link up,
err . by the patient’s
associations, the similarity between his own head
and that of the
A CASE OF WAR SHOCK RESULTING FROM SEX-INVERSION 243
soldier (so full of the expression of horrified disgust, down-trodden,
and with the “Squelching” sound). In reality, this latter head had
acted like the stimulus word “Head” in the test. It had recalled
a painful memory, hitherto repressed.
-Later on, another trauma was brought to light in a similar,
though less dramatic fashion.
About a year afterwards, the patient began to draw a certain
amount of attention to himself on account of his poetic talent.
He was brought intoclose touch with artists and poets in London,
and during this period, he formed close attachments with men
one of whom stood foremost in his estimation. On one occasion,
this man invited him to his house and endeavoured to induce him
to indulge in homosexual practices. This the patient objected to,
and his friend, unlike the woman recently quoted—and this is
important—desisted from his advances. (They remained good
friends, however.)
Now, let us try to use the information provided by the patient,
so as to gain an insight into the processes at work to produce
the symptoms. Before so doing, however, I must state that shortness
of time and other considerations have compelled me to abridge
or cut out completely a great deai of the case material.
Here we have the case of a young boy of, hitherto, fairly
normal type. His sex evolution has just reached the point where
he is passing from the homosexual stage of “hero worship” to
the heterosexual—the ultimate point.
At the critical moment, he is of/iged to experience not only
his first but a very terrible sexual trauma. His sense of self-
assertion, now developing as it progresses towards a more extro-
verted form, is rudely abashed. His sexual energy can no longer
progress along the heterosexual channel, because the repression
has now completely dammed it up, so to speak. But the force of
that energy must find an outlet, and to do so, a regression must
take place. A more than normal amount of it now passes along
the homosexual channel.
True, a trauma is experienced in this channel, but the damming
up is not complete in this case. The circumstances show well that
the patient’s self-assertion was allowed to predominate. His
repression here consisted of a dislike for the sexual act with, but
not in a rooted hatred for, men.
This results in the patient developing a strangely morbid state
244 C. W. S. DAVIES-JONES
of mind. Woman cannot be loved in amy way sexually or other-
wise (if I can be understood), man is loved but not in a grossly
sexual way. The patient now wastes much energy in looking for
the hero-man—a perfect man, full of sympathy and under-
standing, a “Sir Galahad” (according to his own associations).
Here, the question of “breaking the transference” had to be
tackled. It was not long before it became evident that the patient
had begun to project upon the analyst his idealization of the perfect
man. Nor was this anything surprising, if one bears in mind that
no analysis can be at all complete, unless there exists between
patient and analyst a sensible and very real degree of sympathy.
My duty was clear. By this time, the symptoms had cleared
up. The patient knew why he had been afraid to sleep in the
dark. With the knowledge the fear vanished. The treatment had
reached its logical conclusion. It was therefore necessary to pro-
vide the patient with a full explanation of the condition of the
transference, and, tactfully, to show that such a projection now
would only provide a nidus for the formation of new repressions.
- In conclusion, I should like to add that I became convinced
that the sexual inversion was so complete that an attempt to place
the patient upon the heterosexual road, once more, would now
be impossible. It may be satisfactory or salutary to find the cause
of any condition, but it is not always possible to restore full
function. This was a case where “Sublimation” of the sexual
energy was the only way likely to bring peace of mind to the
patient. Hetero-sexuality was a closed channel. Homo-sexuality was
open from an idealistic point of view.
This outlet-—the only one—must be broadened, and the
emerging force brought into play in such a manner as to serve
the highest and most altruistic purposes. |
The patient was advised to follow the “Way of the spirit”. It
is a hard way, fraught with much difficulty, but even in these ma-
terialistic days it exists— and that is the way of “Sublimation”.
Finally I should like to draw attention to the fact that this
case would appear to confirm the view expressed by Dr. Ernest
Jones in that portion of his article dealing with war shock in
Volume I, page 174 of this Journal, namely, “That repressed homo-
sexuality plays a prominent, and perhaps essential, part in the
aetiology of this neurosis”.
DREAMS ON THE SYMBOLISM OF WATER AND FIRE
by
H. FLOURNOY, Geneva.
I give here a brief summary of the history of a patient who
has been under my treatment:
Madame C. aged 45, married and mother of three children, was
towards the end of February attacked suddenly with complete
retention of urine. Some days before she had lost her purse con-
taining a good deal of money, and her husband had reproached
her on the subject. As the retention persisted for more than
a week, and as the patient was only able to pass urine with the
help of a catheter,’ she was admitted on March 11th to a gyne-
cological clinic. Catheterisation relieved her of three to four litres
ofurine. Catheterisation was subsequently carried out three or four
times daily. On one occasion when the nurse suddenly entered
the patient’s room, she was startled and involuntarily passed urine;
this effect however had no lasting result.
At the end of March her medical attendant asked me to give
her psychotherapeutic treatment, as her functional condition
resisted all other medical measures. On March 3lst. I gave her
suggestive treatment. On the following day the patient was very
discouraged and doubted the efficiency of this treatment; she also
told me of a dream on the previous night: “There was no more
water in the Rhone, and she much regretted that her husband, who
was very fond of fishing, had gone to bed and was unable to
take advantage of taking the fish out of the dry river.”
On April 2nd. in the afternoon, she involuntarily wet herself,
but in the evening, shortly after the third sitting, she passed urine
normally for the first time for five weeks. After this she con-
tinued to urinate in a regular and spontaneous manner. On the
third of April I gave her a fourth and last sitting. Some days
after Madame C-. left the home. I have made certain after several
months that she has not had a return of her symptoms.
1 Translated by R. M. Riggall.
245
246 H. FLOURNOY
Certain organic signs might lead one to say that there is in
this patient a medullary lesion, but the sudden appearance of bladder
trouble following an emotional shock strongly makes one presume
in favour of the functional nature of these symptoms. Anyhow
this was not a matter of importance from the point of view of
the symbolic significance of the dream.
She had the dream the day after the first sitting, of which no
other result was experienced. The patient, pre-occupied by this new
treatment, and: always feeling herself incapable of urinating, saw
that the Rhone was dry. The urinary symbolism of dreams of
rivers is well known. Everybody recalls the inference drawn by
Ferenczi from a humorous Hungarian article entitled, “The dream
of a French nurse”, which has become classical by its re-
production in so many psycho-analytical works. I may add that
Madame C. had never thought of this, having never seen it, al-
though she had been a bookseller. °
What interests us more are the sexual themes which the dream
reveals. Some data from the history of the case will supplement
the absence of associations. Madame C., whose children were by
her first marriage, feared having conjugal relations with her second
husband because they made her suffer, and she took minutest pre-
cautions to avoid the risk of again becoming pregnant.
We know from Freud’s work! that dreams of water and of the
bladder are associated in women with pregnancy and fertility.
Rank has supported this subject by one of the most interesting
versions of the legend of the birth of Kyros. When Mandane, the
mother of the hero, was just about to give him birth, she saw in
her dream an enormous river which flowed out of her and inundated
Asia.? The vision of the dry river to our patient, like the retention
of urine, came after a conjugal quarrel. On the other hand it
might mean her desire to remain sterile.
What does Madame C. afterwards do in her dream? She de-
plores the fact that her husband being already in bed was unable
to go and catch fish as he was very fond of fishing. It is dan-
gerous to make too much of Suppositions, but I wonder if our ~
patient did not in her dream phantasy express the desire to
escape from her husband and to see him look for satisfaction
* Freud, Die Traumdeutung. 4. Aufl. S, 271.
: Rank, Die Symbolschichtung im Wecktraum und ihre Wiederkehr im
mythischen Denken. jahrb. d. Psydhoanal., 1912, S, 114,
DREAMS ON THE SYMBOLISM OF WATER AND FIRE 247
elsewhere than in the conjugal bed. It is not necessary to insist
on the symbolism of fish.
Another point seems to confirm the hypothesis that the river,
running water, represents to her the idea of fertility. When
on April 2nd., in the evening after the third sitting of suggestion,
Madame C. commenced to her great surprise to urinate, she dreamed
on the following night that she was nursing a baby.
* K *K
The eight following dreams are extracts from a series given
me by a medical student who was impotent, and has never tried
to approach a woman. These dreams are spread over a period of
several months. They have not been analysed by the association
method so that their study remains very incomplete. Nevertheless
their symbolism is so transparent that they appear to me to be
worthy of publication. The order in which I give them is not that
of their chronological succession but each one is numbered.
Independently of these dreams many symptoms show that
the patient is the victim of a violent G:dipus complex, and that
he has marked homosexual tendencies. In his childhood until
nearly twelve years of age he constantly wet his bed during sleep.
Amongst some of his infantile phantasies he used to wonder
whether in order to have children, women ought not to drink
their husbands’ urine. Towards the age of seven he remembers
amusing himself by urinating on all fours to imitate horses, as he ad-
mired the force used by these animals in the exercise of the act.
Amongst these dreams there were at first. a number in which
the patient experienced the sensation of urinating but found on
waking that he had had an emission of semen. These urinary dreams
of the adult covered, then, an erotic activity as Rank has shown
by a series of examples.! In looking through the work of Freud
Jung, Sadger, and others, we see that the nocturnal incontinence
of urine, so closely related to the infantile phantasies in our case,
had an analogous signification and only expressed the desire for
incest with the mother.? |
* Rank, Loc. cit, S. 95.
2 Concerning this see: Jung, Die Bedeutung des Vaters fiir das Schicksal
des Einzelnen, Jahrb. d. Psydoanal., 1909, S. 168, and Sadger, Uber Urethral-
erotik. J6fd. 1910, S. 409. |
248 H. FLOURNOY
The subjective connection between the urinary and genital
functions is apparent in the dream fragment following, where sexual
ambition is still prominent.
I. DREAM No. 6
I climb a slight undulation in open country, following Mr. X.,
who is supposed to be about to make a speech. I hold under
my arm an immense cylindrical object, many metres long and
as large as a chimney pot; it is at one and the same time a
flag staff and a sheaf of immense dandelions.?
Mr. X. represents the father in his capacity of a public speaker,
he actually does make speeches in contradistinction to the real
Mr. X. who does not. The latter has the reputation of being an
excellent horseman; he thus has frequently between his legs an
organism of which our patient envies the urinary capacity, one
recalls his childish games of urinating like horses. The picture of
Mr. X. which the dreamer follows, tallies with the attributes of
the father and thus with uro-genital power. One can understand
without difficulty, the significance of the voluminous cylindrical
object and the sheaf of immense flowers which are usually asso-
ciated with bed wetting. On the same night the patient experienced
a pollution whilst having the impression of urinating.
Il. DREAM No. 1
I took out my sexual organs and placed them in a glass
specimen jar with physiological solution for treatment.
At first sight it seems as though the patient was in this way
only expressing his desire to be treated from the sexual point of
view. The picture of the glass jar and the physiological solution, an
indispensable liquid to all cellular life, would easily present itself
to the mind of the medical student. But there is also the question
of exhibitionism and above all of castration; in order to restore them
the patient has taken out his sexual organs in order to plunge
them into a saline solution. The symbolic Significance of this act
becomes clear if we study the following dream, in which the
‘ (“Pissenlits”, literal translation “Wet in bed”, is the common French word
for Dandelion. It 1S interesting to observe that the association of dandelions
with bed-wetting is to be found in countries other than Great Britain. (Transl.)]
DREAMS ON THE SYMBOLISM OF WATER AND FIRE 249
manifest content is quite different, but in which the latent content
is comparable.
Ill. DREAM No. 5
I ascend a small, narrow, and dark staircase. Arriving at
the top I am obliged to stoop and flatten myself as though
trying to force my way through a hole; this causes me a
slight feeling of anxiety. On passing out I then find myself in the
south of Sweden, where I notice the pretty fields, woods, and
houses of the country. From here I see in the distance the
Swedish coast, and notice a peculiar railway line going to-
wards the north. At the same time I notice that there are three
countries Norway is not to be found as in reality on the
outside but is wedged in between the two others,—an image
the sexual symbolism of which was apparent to me immediately
on waking.
The patient subsequently added that he had seen nothing
recently which would remind him of the Scandinavian peninsular,
he drew a plan as it appeared to him in his dream.
The passing up the narrow and dark stairs followed by
anxiety, represents coitus; the woods, houses, and mysterious rail-
way often figure in our patient’s dreams as feminine symbols. But
what strikes us most is the imaginary joining up of a third
country which gives to the whole a form of which the dreamer
has immediately grasped the meaning, and of the fact that it is
a peninsular, the coasts of which are bathed in the sea. Taking
into consideration its geographical distortion, this picture has the
same significance as that of the preceding dream; in both cases
we see the virile parts immersed in a salt liquid, the physiological
solution or the sea water. The rich symbolism of salt, to which
Jones has drawn attention', is not irrelevant in the choice of these
liquids. In the first of the two dreams the castration and the bath
of the organs has a therapeutic objective: — to give to the
patient his sexual capacity. In the second of the two dreams the
sexual act endeavours to assert itself in a symbolic form: the
passage up the stairs, and the image of the immense peninsular
made up of a penis and two testicles which are sunk in the ocean.
1 Jones, Die Bedeutung des Salzes in Sitte und Brauch der VOlker.
Imago, 1912, B.I, S, 361 & 454,
250 H. FLOURNOY
I have no need to draw attention to the significance of water
and the ocean in order to show that these phantasies of im-
mersion mean in the case of our patient the desire to return to
the maternal womb. The infantile enuresis which expressed itself
in the bathing of the organs in saline solution, was already the
expression of the incest complex. Also there is the adult sym-
bolism which shows the virile parts renewed in the nourishing
liquid of the reviving water.
But there is still more. In the case of an impotent person
strongly entangled in maternal attachments, this castration picture
in view of a future rebirth, offers particular interest. Without doubt
it can therefore be considered as a defence reaction, an instinctive
reaction against the incest idea itself, and should be placed in the
same category as certain initiation rites practised by savage
tribes. At puberty, the initiate before coming to man’s estate has
to submit to a ceremonial accompanied by bodily mutilations
similar to circumcision; according to Freud this merely symbolises
castration. Studied in the light of Psycho-Analysis, the idea con-
veyed by these rites performed on the young candidate by his
father or his elders, should be that of a forewarning, or perhaps
also an atonement for incest and parricidal tendencies?.
IV, DREAM No, 4
On a strip of coast bordering the sea are three houses at
the edge of the water. My mother, who happened to be there,
saw that the front of my shirt was quite wet; I have the feeling
of having urinated on it, but my mother remarked that it
must have been a pollution. The middle house is probably
a bathing establishment. Sitting quite close to me at the edge
* Infantile origins or phantasies of the same kind are probably asso-
ciated with the flood myth — or better with exposure on the waves —
which in the hero myths precede the rebirth, (See Rank, Der Mythus von
der Geburt des Helden, 1909, Spielrein, Die Destruktion als Ursache des
Werdens, Jahrb. d. Psydoanal,, 1912, S, 465.). Fire has the same symbolism
as that of water: to destroy in order to revive, The Phoenix is consumed
and born again from the cinders; hence to his funeral pyre is given the name
of immortality by the students of heraldry,
* On the Castration Com
und Sage, 1912, S, 283,
B. IV., S. 125 & 189,
plex, see: Rank, Das Inzestmotiv in Dichtung
Reik, Die Pubertatsriten der Wilden. Imago, 1915.
DREAMS ON THE SYMBOLISM OF WATER AND FIRE 251
of the water, are two enormous ostriches. As I approach them
they get up, and under each one I find a little ostrich. They
are not then a pair, but two females; I try to touch the fluff
on the tip of the wing of one of them, but she escaped.
Both entered the water and made magnificent dives. I
have a very vague impression that Madame T., or my mother,
who was in the house, scolded me for having caused the
ostriches to go away. At the end of this dream I felt as it
one of my teeth had come out; applying my finger I found
that the whole enamel coat had become detached without
otherwise doing any harm.
The significant number of three houses at the edge of the
water, one of which isa bathing establishment, without doubt has
the same sexual significance as the three Scandinavian countries;
this is confirmed by the incident of urinating or of pollution in the
presence of the mother, an incident, interposed at this moment of
the dream, which betrays the incest complex. The huge ostriches
each covering a smaller one, in view of bisexual symbolism, represent
at the same time feminine fertility and probably the two testicles.
(Compare the two huge birds with the immense cylindrical object
which symbolised the penis in the first dream.) The plunging of
the ostriches into the water symbolises the immersion of the
organs in the maternal womb. The mother’s reproaches and the
incident of the finger and detached tooth are connected with
onanistic phantasies and the pollution. This was actually referred
to in a dream occurring on the same night, but which I cannot
enter into here as it would unduly lengthen the subject.}
V. DREAM No. 3
I am in a room with some other people, one of whom isa
lady (Madame T.?). She and I arrange a sort of brush, and in
order to soften the bristles, lam applying glycerine and collodium
to it with a small paint brush. Then all the lights are put out.
When the lights are turned on again, the lady finds that she
1 On the symbolism of numbers and teeth dreams, see: Freud, Traum-
deutung. Stekel, Die Sprache des Traumes, 1911, — On that of birds:
Maeder, Interpretation of afew Dreams, Archives de Psychologie, 1907, Vol. VI,
p. 372. Rank, “Traum und Mythus” in Freud, Traumdeutung, 4, Aufl., S. 399.
252 H. FLOURNOY
has polished the brush in such a way as to have transformed
it into a rectangular object striped with alternate bands of green
and black—like the ribbon of 1870.
Madame T. is the same person who was confounded with the
mother in the preceding dream. In her company, the application
of a slimy liquid (glycerine or collodium) to the bristles of the brush.
may pass without comment. We find here the disguised motive of —
incest. As a reward for this act performed by a young man who
is ashamed of impotence, we have the symbolism of the insignia
of the brave in the ribbon of 1870. The part played by the ex-
tinction of the light affords a dividing line between this first series
of dreams and those following, in which the sexual meaning of fire
is apparent.
VI. DREAM No. 8
My uncle, aunt, and I alight from a tram at the terminus
station to go for a walk in the woods. It is an uncultivated
part. The beautiful woods remind me of the place where I saw
a house burning in a preceding dream. There must also
be a fire in some part of this wood. Scarcely had I left the
tram with these two people, when I asked them why their son
had not come, and my aunt replied: “He has not come because
he practises voluntary denial.”
The fire in the wood in which the uncle and aunt are walking,
(7. e. the father and the mother) can be at once seen to symbolise
their marriage relations. If their son, with whom the patient
identifies himself, has not come, it is because he practises self-
denial. This expression in a clearly sexual sense means that the
continence of our patient quite deprives him of the gratification
of fire.
VII. DREAM No, 2
I find myself at the edge of a sort of well, at the side of
a house. On the top of this well which is perhaps five metres
deep there are poised two or three windows. I notice that
smoke is emerging from the small windows like the commence-
ment of a fire; I warn the people who are standing
near me, one of whom is a servant —a virgin. She des-
cends into the well and disappears without having stopped the
DREAMS ON THE SYMBOLISM OF WATER AND FIRE 253
smoke. I become uneasy, and see coming out of one of the
windows a girl completely naked, and apparently an idiot.
I find on my left. two little watering cans full of water,
which I pour over the girl. She comes out of the well as
if she were in the air, and I notice that her back is wet
with the water which I have poured over her; I am struck
with the beauty of her black hair, thickly spread over her white
shoulders, and I cannot refrain from lightly patting her shoulders
with my hand; at that instant I ejaculate against the wall of
the well and wake up.
In this erotic dream—the dream pollution is in fact pro-
duced simultaneously—the water has a double meaning. Shut
up at the bottom of the well, it probably symbolises the female
genital organs. The two watering cans which the patient holds
(the testicles) represent the natural sprinkling which the male
delivers to the female. As for the other elements of the dream—
the idiot girl down whose back the water runs, the black hair,
the tap on the shoulders—unfortunately the lack of associations
will not allow an interpretation. The essential characteristics of this
passionate dream are the coexistence of fire and water destined
to extinguish it.
Fire and water are opposites having mutual relations and often
figuring in erotic symbolism, as Freud has shown us in his analysis
of the case of “Dora” and elsewhere}. This association is seen in the
form of symbolic actions found in certain incendiaries. In one case
an impotent man seemed to find a substitute for his genital
functions in incendiary acts, having without any conscious motive
set on fire a dozen farms in a few years. Each time he com-
mitted the crime he seemed to be possessed by an irresistible
compulsion to extinguish the fire of which he was the cause, and
his zeal gave him certain rewards of which he was afterwards
ashamed 2.
We end with an anxiety dream, which undoubtedly arises from
certain onanistic phantasies, and shows still very clearly the as-
sociation between water and fire.
e
1 Freud, Bruchstiick einer Hysterieanalyse. Neurosenlehre, 1909, 2. Folge, S.63.
2 I have published this case in ‘Notes on four cases of Obsessions and
Compulsions of sudden onset.” Read before the Medical Society of Geneva,
Feb. 1917.
254 H. FLOURNOY
VIII. DREAM No. 7
I am at the side of a fountain and just going to speak to
someone who is opposite to me. At the same time I hold in
my hand my erect penis which assumes enormous proportions.
It expels some liquid in a continuous jet, and I certainly have
a feeling of strength and virility although there is no actual
voluptuous sensation. The organ assumes such proportions that
I begin to get uneasy, and its extremity is transformed into the
head of a serpent; it squirms about in every direction and I begin
to be afraid because it tries to bite my hand; also 1 am under
the impression that it is no longer liquid but fire which it spits
out of its mouth. I awake, and instinctively see the image of
the head of a certain woman whose coiffure is composed of
serpents. (No pollution took place.)
The longing for sexual power and virile propensities could not
be expressed in a more forcible way. Besides, the symbolical
similitude of fire and water as generative elements could not have
received a clearer demonstration.
In conclusion permit me to digress, and to compare the con-
tents of this dream with certain emblazoned figures which are
sometimes found on very ancient armour: A serpent which vomits
flame or swallows a child. I think the students of heraldry are
mistaken in their interpretation of this last figure; the animal does
not swallow the little creature as they believe, but vomits it. This
seems to me to be the simplest explanation; also it is preferable
to the one which compares the serpent to the monstrous beast
whose réle, according to mythological legends, is to devour the
hero. If the serpent vomiting fire represents the idea of creative
power, one can understand that this idea can be symbolised still
better by the picture of the serpent vomiting the child.
* % x
In these dreams there are sometimes sentiments of inferiority (II)
or of sexual ambition (I, VIII), sometimes erotic tendencies (III, VII)
or plain incestuous feelings (IV, V), which display themselves in a
symbolic way by borrowing the images of water, liquid, or fire.
pave i DIAL ca pg confirms in an objective ‘anwappaneid the
diverahty, ine al alan leis Under their apparent
are tha bakes Wh iy § the cares bneenee complexes which
ychoneurosis; but we must be careful to
DREAMS ON THE SYMBOLISM OF WATER AND FIRE 255
guard against saying that these complexes of infantile origin, should
be regarded as the “causes” of the dreams of the adult and of |
his other morbid symptoms. It is sufficient for us to have demon-
strated that these diverse psychological manifestations present in
themselves certain connections which can be fitted together’.
Many readers will not be convinced; they will regard these
interpretations as exaggerated, or even absurd. But this article is
not intended to convince; it is addressed solely to those who may
have observed analogical symbols among the same kind of patients.
The dreams which form the basis of this work should appear
sufficiently clear, in spite of the absence of associations which,
alone, would have given all the scientific rigour necessary for their
study.
1 We make this remark because of Jaspers’ criticism that Freud confounds in-
telligible with purely causal relations. This criticism, which perhaps is the strongest
addressed to the Freudian school, should be taken into consideration; it is
itself open to serious objections which have been exposed by Binswanger,
amongst others (Kausale und verstaéndiiche Zusammenhange etc. Jnfernat.
Zettshr. f. Psydhoanal., 1913, B. I, S. 383.).
17
A LINGUISTIC FACTOR IN ENGLISH CHARACTEROLOGY}
by
ERNEST JONES, London.
The definiton of national character traits is notoriously treach-
erous ground, but in all attempts to describe those most typical
or general among English people one is always mentioned with
such unvarying emphasis that it is hard to resist the con-
clusion that it must relate, however roughly, to some group of
observable phenomena. I refer to the striking insistence of the
English on propriety, which is commented on not only by practi-
cally all foreign observers, but also by Americans and our fellow-
subjects from overseas, not to speak of the “Keltic fringe” in our
own islands. That it degenerates into prudishness here more often
than in any other country, at least in the Old World, will also,
I think, be widely admitted. The trait is probably to be correlated
in some degree with the proneness to reserve, the, absence of
social gifts, the dislike of betraying emotion of any kind, and the
horror of self-display, vaunting, braggadocio, gasconade, rodomon-
tade — one sees that we have to use foreign terms to indicate
attitudes so foreign to us — which also belong to the judgements
passed on the English by foreigners. Psychologically the group in
question might perhaps be described in McDougall’s language as a
deficiency in the self-regarding instinct. Psycho-analysts would call
attention to the secondary nature of the phenomena as indicating
the existence of what is called a reaction-formation, and indeed
that something is being actively controlled or avoided is fairly
evident; they would probably ascribe the traits to a reaction against
more than one complex, repressed exhibitionism being perhaps
the most prominent. However this may be, it has occurred to me
that there is possibly a connection between this group of character
traits — which, for convenience, might be referred to as the
propriety trait — and a peculiar historical feature in the deve-
lopment of the English language, but before submitting this idea
‘ Read before the British Psychological Society, March 14th, 1920.
256
A LINGUISTIC FACTOR IN ENGLISH CHARACTEROLOGY = 257
for your consideration I shall have to make a few remarks on
some general psychological aspects of speech.
There are good grounds for believing that speech originally
was a far more concrete activity than it now is, and it has indeed
been maintained that all speech represents pretermitted action.?
Plain indications of this are to be observed among less cultivated
human beings, especially children and savages. Freud?, for instance,
following Groos, points out that children treat words as objects in
the various games they play with them, while Frazer’, in his
section on Tabooed Words, brings forward a mass of evidence
illustrating the extraordinary significance attached by primitive
races to words and especially to names. He says, following Tylor:
“Unable to discriminate clearly between words and things, the
savage commonly fancies that the link between a name and the
person or thing denominated by it is not a mere arbitrary and
ideal association, but a real and substantial bond which unites the
‘two in such a way that magic may be wrought on a man just as
easily through his name as through his hair, his nails, or any other
material part of his person. In fact, primitive man regards his
name as a vital portion of himself and takes care of it accor-
dingly.” He cites‘ the example of the Sulka of New Britain
who when near their enemies speak of them as “rotten tree-
trunks”, “and they imagine that by calling them that they make
the limbs of their dreaded enemies ponderous and clumsy like
logs. This example illustrates the extremely materialistic view
which these savages take of the nature of words; they suppose
that the mere utterance of an expression signifying clumsiness
will homoeopathically affect with clumsiness the limbs of their
distant foemen. Another illustration of this curious misconception
is furnished by a Caffre superstition that the character of a young
thief can be reformed by shouting his name over a boiling kettle
of medicated water, then clapping a lid on the kettle and leaving
the name to steep in the water for several days.” Of the innu-
merable examples from the field of taboo one may be quoted:5
the Alfoors of Poso are not only not allowed to mention the
1 Ferenczi, Contributions to Psycho-Analysis. (Engl. Transl.) 1916. p. 120.
* Freud, Der Witz und seine Beziehung zum Unbewuften. 1905. S. 105.
8 Frazer, Taboo and the Perils of the Soul. 1911. Chapter VI.
4 Tbid. Op. cit. p. 331.
& Ibid. Op. cit. p. 340.
17*
258 ERNEST JONES
names of their parents-in-law, a common enough prohibition, but
if such a name happens to be the same as that of a thing —
e.g. in English a Mr. Lake — then they may not mention
even this thing by its own name, only by a borrowed one. Even
with us the use of bad language by children is treated as a sin
of no mean order, and the law of England can still condemn a
man to imprisonment for making use in public of certain for-
bidden (obscene) words, the utterance aloud of the heinous words
being in both cases regarded as equivalent to a nefarious deed.
The nature of this primitive material conception of words and
speech can be described more exactly. One of the conclusions
emerging from Freud’s work on the psychology of wit and of
dreams is that all words originally possessed distinct motor and
perceptual qualities, which they gradually lose more or less com-
pletely in the course of mental development. As has been interest-
ingly expounded by Ferenczi!, there is a class of words, namely,
obscene words, which, probably because of their being excluded
from the usual course of development, still retain these qualities
in a full measure. On the perceptual side Ferenczi? remarks that
a word of this kind “has a peculiar power of compelling the hearer
to imagine the object it denotes in substantial actuality”, and adds
“one may therefore infer that these words as such possess the
capacity of compelling the hearer to revive memory pictures in a
regressive and hallucinatory manner”; he calls attention to the fact
that delicate allusions to the same ideas, and scientific or foreign
designations for them, do not have this effect, or at least not to
the same extent as the words taken from the original, popular,
erotic vocabulary of one’s mother-tongue. On the motor side the
following three illustrations may be mentioned: the aggressive
tendency which Freud has shewn to underlie the uttering of ob-
scene jokes — this being a substitute for a sexual aggression ;
the curious perversion of coprophemia in which the sexual act
consists solely of uttering indecent words to women; and the
obsessional neurosis, where the act itself of thinking is curiously
sexualised in the preconscious in such a way that the impulsion
to think certain thoughts comes as a substitute for forbidden acts.
In all these cases the act of thought or speech is psychologically
the full equivalent of an actual deed.
* Ferenczi. Op. cit. Chapter IV.
* Ferenczi. Op. eff, p. 116.
A LINGUISTIC FACTOR IN ENGLISH CHARACTEROLOGY 259
As was remarked above, in the course of mental development
the motor and perceptual elements become more and more elimi-
nated from words, and in purely abstract thought they disappear
altogether. It may be recalled that Galton many years ago pointed
out how much less capable of abstract thought are as a rule
persons of a pronouncedly visual or auditory type as contrasted
with those whose thought processes contain only feeble percep-
tual elements. One may also in this connection refer to Freud’s
latest conclusion on the unconscious,? namely, that the essential
difference between unconscious and conscious ideas is that the
former consist only of ideas (which easily regress to images) of
the object or process, whereas the latter contain as well the idea
of the corresponding word. Thus unconscious mentation and
abstract thought stand at the two opposite ends of the-scale in this
respect, the ideas of the former being near to perceptual imagery,
those of the latter being almost completely divested of it.
It is evident that this process of gradual abstraction effects a
great economy of thought; indeed, without it none of the higher
forms of thought could occur. It is probable that this economical
(factor is of prime importance in bringing about the process in question,
but it has to be remarked that this is accompanied by other
important psychical changes as well, which probably also stand in)
a causal relation to it. I refer to the inhibition in feeling that
goes with the progress from the motor-perceptual stage to the
abstract one, and the valuable saving in expenditure of emotional
energy that this signifies. There is thus a double economy, an
intellectual and an affective one. The affective economy, to which
I wish to draw special attention, may be illustrated from two
sides. On the one hand, when there is a need to express unusually
strong feeling recourse is commonly had, through regression, to
the use of just those words which have retained their motor and
perceptual elements, as in oaths and obscene language, a proce-
dure much more manifest in the male sex because of their having
been to a less extent the subject of repression in this sex. The desire for -
expression combined with a sense of incapacity for it, so common
in the young, similarly results in the phenomenon of slang. On
the other hand, when there is a special need to inhibit feeling
recourse is had to the use of abstract, or at all events less
familiar words. It is well known that an otherwise forbidden idea
* Freud, Sammlung kleiner Schriften. Vierte Folge. 1918. S. 334.
260 ERNEST JONES
can be readily expressed if only it is veiled in a euphemism or
translated into a foreign tongue. Most books on sexology, for
instance, contain whole passages written in Latin. The reason is
that the vulgar, familiar words would tend to arouse embarrass-
ing feelings, in both speaker and hearer, which can be avoided
by the use of foreign, unfamiliar, or abstract words which have
been acquired only in later years.
After this long digression I now return to the theme of English
characterology. Without entering on a discussion of the numerous
individual, social, or racial forces making for repression and in-
hibition, I can only think that such a process must be favoured
if one of the main instruments by means of which it is carried
out is peculiarly accessible. Thus, if it is unusually easy to give
vocal expression to forbidden ideas in a way that inhibits the
development of feeling it seems to me to follow that in such
circumstances feeling will be more readily and extensively inhi-
bited. Now it is clear that this is just the situation in which the
English race has been placed for nearly a thousand years. The
Saxon and Norman languages, after living side by side for about
two centuries, gradually coalesced to form English, but to this
day there is in most cases an obvious difference in the “feel” of
the words belonging to each, and still more between words of
Saxon origin and Latin words more recently introduced than
their Norman-French precursors. All literary men recognise the
distinction clearly, and every text-book dealing with style in
writing urges the student to choose the Saxon words wherever
it is possible without being precious, as being more vivid, robust
and virile, 7 e. because of their greater capacity to arouse plastic
images and feeling-tone. Our store of synonyms is unequalled by
that of any other European language, and the difference in the
respects I have mentioned between such pairs as house and domi-
cile, fatherly and paternal, book and volume, is quite patent. The
existence of this double stratum of words enables us to indulge
in fastidiousness to a degree not open to any other nation. Most
culinary terms are, for historical reasons, of Romance origin, and the
difference between being invited to a dish of veal or pork and
one of calves’ flesh or swine flesh is very perceptible. No other
nation is unable to use its native word for belly if need be, but
we DARE to say “abdomen”, and that only with circumspection.
In English a lady is gravid, pregnant, or enceinte, there being no
A LINGUISTIC FACTOR IN ENGLISH CHARACTEROLOGY = 261
single native word to describe the phenomenon. The process in
question can often be followed in its stages, such as when the
Saxon word “gut” gets replaced first by the Norman-French
“bowel”, and then, when this is found too coarse, by the Latin
“intestine”.
The suggestion I make, therefore, is that the development of
the outstanding English character trait of propriety has been
fostered by the peculiar nature of the English language, one
resulting from the success of a Norman adventurer some thousand
years ago.
THE WISH TO BE A MAN |
by
HANNS SACHS, Berlin.
The patient whose case I am presenting was a very intelligent
young girl aged about twenty, belonging to a refined and religious |
family. She came for Analysis not on account of any strongly-
marked neurotic symptoms, but because she was burdened by
uncertainty and anxiety, and was unable to concentrate her
thoughts or form plans for the future, although her difficulties
were not sufficiently great completely to prevent her carrying out
her duties. It was only later on, after the analysis had progressed
considerably, that she recalled a marked neurotic symptom which
had appeared after puberty (at about the age of fourteen), and
had become repressed again, namely, the obsessional idea, (which
had caused her much suffering), that when she walked out of
doors all the passers-by could see her genital organs. At the very
beginning, when I asked her to tell freely all her thoughts, she
declared, after some hesitation and with all the signs of an inward
struggle, that she felt unable to comply with the fundamental
principle of Psycho-Analysis (7.2. to utter everything which came
into her mind) until she had made a full confession of something
that had oppressed her ever since her youth. When she was aged
twelve and a half she had spent some months in the house of
an aunt, and a boy cousin, about a year older than herself, had
been her playmate. In those games which had a sexual background,
the kind common among children of this age, these two had gone
rather far in overt action. Beginning with merely viewing and
touching each other’s genitals, they had arrived finally very near
to the act of sexual intercourse. I was obliged to piece together
all this from the hints she dropped, for though my patient was
too intelligent to be a prude in the ordinary sense, nevertheless
she could not bring herself to relate these incidents clearly and
coherently. I surmised, and my guess was confirmed by the patient
herself, that she was oppressed by the fear of having lost her
1 Translated by Barbara Low.
262 —
THE WISH TO BE A MAN 263
virginity at this time. After this episode she had experienced great
depression, feeling herself morally depraved and unworthy to mix
with her sisters and comrades. She had never confided in anyone,
and her mother was the only person who knew anything about
the matter. When I asked how her mother, who had not been
present at the time, came to know about it, she replied in an
astonished way that she really did not know—it had never occurred
to her before to consider that question. In addition, she told me
that since her early childhood she had not been on very con-
fidential terms with her parents who were too pious and narrow-
minded for her. As a result of these wrongdoings in childhood
she developed an abhorrence of sexuality in actual life and in Art,
and an intense dislike to being touched, still more to being kissed,
by a man. At her sisters wedding she hid herself immediately
after the ceremony to avoid kissing her new brother-in-law. She
could never listen when her comrades spoke of sexual matters,
and she declared that she was eighteen when she learned for the
first time, at college, of the difference between the male and
female genitals, of the facts of procreation, and of childbirth. At
this stage I interrupted her with the remark that her experiences
with her cousin should have sufficed to open her eyes as to the
difference between the two sexes. She still, nevertheless, firmly
maintained that she had remained ignorant of these facts until
her eighteenth year, although she could not herself reconcile this
with her earlier experiences.
I wish to point out here that this is a typical instance of a
repression which did not completely succeed. The traumatic
occurrence itself remained in consciousness, but all connecting
associations with the rest of the conscious mind were completely
eradicated, and the tendency to throw off this memory had thereby
hindered her from profiting by it to obtain knowledge on sexual
matters. Further we shall see shortly that her memory of this
significant occurrence was far from being complete, but as regards
some important points had failed her owing to the repressing
tendency.
During the first interview, which lasted two hours, I was struck
by a peculiarity of my patient—one which made rather large
demands upon my self-control. This was her quite extraordinary
restlessness: sometimes she would throw herself to the right side,
then to the left; or, lying on her back, she would draw her feet
264 HANNS SACHS
upwards and throw them straight out again suddenly; sometimes
she sat up to straighten her dress, or fidgetted along the wall
with her hands, or played with her handkerchief, or fumbled in
her hair, and so forth. I finished this sitting with some quieting
explanations which made some impression upon her, but neither
then, nor later, was her general condition changed, nor her
unrest. During this first interview she related to me her earliest
remembrance: a stranger (a man) had taken her on his knee and
she had bitten his ear. In every way she had been a wild child.
She would never play with dolls, and for playfellows she chose,
not girls, but the wildest and most unruly boys with whom she
tried to compete. After this narration she gave vent to complaints—
often repeated in subsequent sittings—concerning her feeling of
inferiority as a woman. She thought that the best and cleverest
of the young men with whom she was acquainted would refuse
to accept a girl as a real comrade, or to let her share in their
serious masculine interests. A superficial observer would have
deduced that this inferiority-feeling was the core of her depressed
condition.
The second interview brought about two important communi-
cations. Since the previous sitting, the patient had—without any
orders from me, naturally—enquired of her mother how she had
come to know about the episode with the cousin. The mother
had given the surprising answer that my patient herself had con-
fessed all, apparently without external reason, shortly after the
occurrence, when the family moved to a new residence. A second
communication made to me by my patient was that although she
was accustomed to sleep long hours and deeply, she was very
restless, sometimes tossing about, talking, and even getting up in
her sleep without knowing it. Further that the night after our first
interview a very curious thing had occurred. When she was called
in the morning, it was found that she had got up during the night
in her sleep and had bolted the door. This was easily interpreted
as a transference, by way of unconscious phantasies, of her youth-
ful sexual experiences on to the person of the Analyst, and the
matter of the transference having thus started favourably, the work
of Analysis proceeded quickly.
After three months of Analysis we reached a phase in which
the patient always told her dreams (which she remembered very
clearly) without being able to give any useful associations, so that
THE WISH TO BE A MAN 265
the interpretation remained very incomplete. The theme of these
dreams was always some forbidden act carried out by the dreamer:
once she dreamed that she entered a house against the will of
the owner, and another time that she stole flowers from someone’s
garden. After some time had been spent in endeavouring to
interpret her dreams, there suddenly came to the surface a remem-
brance, repressed hitherto, which contained a most important part
of the patient’s sexual life. She now quite clearly remembered
that about the age of fifteen or sixteen every night in bed she
had a vision that Christ lay at her side and repeated with her
the sexual acts she had experienced with her cousin, so that she
felt a very vivid sexual excitation. Although this phantasy was so
repulsive to her that she dreaded to go to sleep, she gave way to
it for some time. Such a phantasy is a typical offspring of infantile
masturbation, and very likely in the course of the phantasy mastur-
bation was actually carried out unconsciously by pressing together
the thighs, although of this the patient had no recollection.
After having produced this remembrance, she at once came
to another theme which seemed closely associated with the former.
She related that her first menstruation had taken place a short
time after her return home from the visit to her aunt; she knew
no details about the occurrence, only that somehow she had been
very much surprised by it. She remembered also that her elder
sister had told her that she had been on a visit when the first
menstruation suddenly appeared, and had been so much taken by
surprise that she had called for help.
The Christ-phantasy was the first instance of masturbation
which came back to the patient’s consciousness, and now the
connexion between the different facts, hitherto so obscure, became
quite clear. By means of the erotic scenes with her cousin her
sexuality had been prematurely aroused in a high degree. After
separation from her companion there was no other way open to
her to satisfy her roused desires save by masturbation. When the
first menstruation appeared, she saw in the sudden flow of blood
a punishment for her misuse of her genital organs, and in her
terror and contrition was impelled to ‘confess to her mother her
secret misdeeds with her cousin. The remembrance of her sister’s
great fright over her first menstruation was a so-called “cover-
memory” for the since-repressed disturbances in her own mind
over the similar experience of her own. There remained only one
266 HANNS SACHS
open question, and others, more definite, followed later on. Why
was it that the terror roused by the bleeding genital had been
so strong and remained unmitigated, although without doubt the
mother had explained that this was quite a normal occurrence?
The material I had previously obtained allowed a conjecture
on the question. I knew already that she had a vague remembrance
of something that had happened in the days of her early child-
hood when she was about four or five years old. She knew that
she had done something of a forbidden and sexual character with
a boy playmate of the same age. In telling about this she dis-
covered in her memory—without the slightest idea of its meaning,
or where she had picked it up—the vulgar word for the sexual
act in the language of the country where she had lived from her
birth until her tenth year. I thought it justifiable to assume that
at this time (of the forbidden act) she had seen her playfellow’s
genital organ and this had caused her envy. She had naturally
asked herself why she was lacking in this important part, and had
given herself the answer that it had been somehow taken away
from her as a punishment for misusing it. This experience, there-
fore, would have been the prototype of the later sexual acts with
her cousin, and the source of her anxiety. It tallied well with my
conjecture that she had (as I heard later on), about the same
time, tried by every means in her power to annoy her nursemaid;
although ordinarily very kind-hearted, she had behaved most
cruelly to this person, without any conscious motive. Probably a
threat used by the nurse in connexion with the patient’s infantile
onanism had aroused this hatred. This conjecture | communicated
to her with all possible caution. She remained silent for a long
time, and then asked suddenly: “What is the meaning of biting
one’s own hand?’ I answered her by another question, namely,
whether in this case, “one” did not stand for “I”, ladded: “If you
have this habit you will understand it now, without my help.” In
reply she gave the interpretation to be as follows: She had
believed earlier that her male genital organ had been bitten off
I will point out here that this belief, curious as it may seem,
must once have been very widespread. Numerous ethnological
parallels exist : a great majority among primitive peoples hold that
@ woman in menstruation has been bitten in ¢
he genital organs
by some demon. ; :
The earliest remembrance from her childhood is therefore a
THE WISH TO BE A MAN 267
“cover-memory”, serving to obliterate from her memory the most
painful impression, and substituting for the idea of being bitten
the opposite idea of biting. This turning of passivity into activity
became an important character-trait. Henceforward biting was an
unconscious outcome of her repressed tendencies, and in satisfying
these she punished herself by hurting the hand—the instrument
of her early guilt. This, too, was the reason why she was unable
to kiss, even on such a formal occasion as her sister’s wedding.
From all this, the envy regarding men and inferiority-feeling
of the patient and her desire to be a man are revealed in quite
a new light. That we had discovered the truth was demonstrated
by the result: from this moment her restlessness entirely
disappeared. Without having formed any plan, without struggle
or exertion, she was able to lie motionless and continued to do
so, excepting on certain occasions of great emotional stress, during
the remainder of the Analysis.
AN INSTANCE OF THE CARE NEEDED IN DRAWING
CONCLUSIONS
by
DOUGLAS BRYAN, London.
a
A patient whom I am treating by psycho-analysis came the
other day for her usual sitting. She was wearing a long fur coat
which a few days previously she had received back from the
makers after it had been renovated with a new silk lining. She
took it off and placed it folded inside out over the back of the
couch upon which she settled herself. She then related a dream
she had had the night before. After telling me the dream she
asked if she might refer to a little book in which she had made
some notes of the dream. She said the book was in the pocket
of her coat. I agreed to her request, and she reached up and
placed her hand in the pocket of the coat which was situated in
the lining and on the left side of the coat; the pocket was quite
obvious as the coat was lying across the back of the couch. She
felt in the pocket and immediately exclaimed, “Why, the book is
not here”. She said that she was certain she had placed it in the
pocket just before she came out, and now it had disappeared. She
was very much disturbed and felt that there was something un-
canny about its disappearance. She got up from the couch and
looked about the room to see if she had dropped it. As she could
not find it she sat down again still very distressed, and assured
me that she had placed the book in the pocket. In despair she
snatched the coat off the back of the couch on to her knees and
again placed her hand in the pocket, when she suddenly ex-
claimed, “Why, here it is”, and she brought out the book from
the pocket. The book was a very thin one about four inches long
by two and a half wide and covered in cretonne; it had only
two or three pages in it for notes. I might add that when she
first placed her hand in the pocket she found in it a small hole,
but this was too small for the book to have slipped through.
The note she had made in the book and which she at first
268
AN INSTANCE OF THE CARE NEEDED IN DRAWING CONCLUSIONS 269
had assured me was quite unimportant eventually turned out to be
of great importance and had decidedly unpleasant associations.
I consider that one was perfectly justified in concluding that
the patient’s failure to find the book in her pocket when she first
felt for it was motivated by the unconscious desire not to pro-
duce the book on account of the unpleasant things that would arise
from the notes it contained. Further, I see no reason from the
above description why one should not quote this case as an in-
stance of what one might call “obliteration of the sense of touch
due to unconscious motives”. However the sequel to this story
will show that an apparently justifiable conclusion falls to the
ground when certain other factors are known, and a pretty in-
stance of “obliteration of touch” is negatived.
This is the sequel. Three days later the patient came for her
usual daily sitting and again appeared in her fur coat. She re-
moved it and placed it in the same position as before. Again she
wanted to refer to the little book, and laughingly said, “I hope I
shall find it this time all right”. She put her hand into the pocket
just as she had done before and exclaimed in a horrified voice,
“Good gracious, it’s not here’. Her distress was most marked.
I immediately asked her to hand the coat to me so that I could
feel in the pocket, for it struck me as extraordinary for the same
thing to happen on two occasions so close together. I felt in the
pocket and told her the book was not in it, but that there was a
large hole through which the book could pass. She said that evi-
dently the hole had got much bigger. I suggested that the book
had worked its way down in the lining of the coat and felt about
for it, but I could not feel it anywhere near the pocket. I then
thought it might have travelled round the coat through her move-
ments in walking to my rooms and therefore felt all round the
coat. At last I felt it and said, “Here it is, right round the other
side”; she seized the coat and immediately remarked, “Why, there
are two pockets in it, I did not know that before”, and pulled out
the book.
Now for the explanation. Before coming to my rooms she had
placed the book in the pocket in the lining in the ef hand side
of the coat. She had only had this one pocket in the original
lining of the coat. On removing her coat in my rooms she had
folded it so that the right hand lining pocket was uppermost and
this she had first of all put her hand in when she failed to find
270 DOUGLAS BRYAN
the book on both occasions. When she pulled the coat on to her
knees she, apparently unknown to herself, turned it so that the left
hand pocket was uppermost and the same thing occurred when
she took the coat from me, and now of course she found the
book which had been in that pocket all the time. Thus her touch
had not been obliterated, for there was no book in the second
pocket.
The patient’s apparent ignorance of the presence of the second
pocket of course needs some explanation, for it is hardly con-
ceivable that a lady would miss seeing the pocket in looking over
the renovated lining. But this point is outside the scope of
this note. These few remarks teach the lesson that entirely
unforeseen factors may easily render an assumption valueless, and
further that it is often dangerous to come to hasty conclusions.
A REVIVED SENSATION-MEMORY
by
BARBARA LOW
The Patient was a woman of thirty-five, who came to analysis
on account of an obsessional phobia, namely, that she might hurt
or kill persons with whom she came into contact.
One day, while waiting to begin the analysis hour (in my
absence), she took a book from the shelves. When I came in, she
put back the book (the title of which I did not see) without any
comment. On her arrival about four days after this episode she
began at once very eager, to relate a memory which had
come to mind the evening before for the ,first time since child-
hood, and seemed to spring from thinking over, on that evening,
the book she had glanced at four days previously in my room.
‘The book was a volume of poems entitled “Look! We have come
through”, by D. H. Lawrence, a book which she had not heard of
before this occasion. On the paper wrapper of the cover was a
“cubist” representation of curves and rectilineal planes, in black
and white. . |
My patient began by telling me that on the previous evening
she was sitting idly meditating, and this book came into her mind:
she had not seen the contents when glancing at it in my room,
merely the cover. Thinking over it, she was much interested
in the Zit/e (“Look! We have come through”) which she assumed
was meant in Aer sense of the words, namely, that some force
or element striving in a human being—most likely a violent or
evil force—had succeeded in emerging. She added that this was
always the situation she felt in herself—some sort of evil spirit
was perpetually struggling to “get through” and forcing her into
her evil actions (or desires) of hurting and killing. She then went
on to record that the drawing on the cover had returned to memory
at the same time, but she felt no interest in it—it was meaningless
her—and she dismissed it from her mind.
Soon after this revery she went to bed, and before she fell
271 18
272 BARBARA LOW
asleep, there came to her mind the memory which she now
related.
Between the ages of four and six years, she had two or three
times over a very vivid image, usually in the morning, upon
waking. This image was one of herself coming through a long
passage of tubular shape, its sides a yellowish-brown in colour,
at the end of which was a small round hole through which a
bright white light streamed. She herself seemed to be moving up
this tube towards the light, and when the revived image came to
her that night she felt distinctly, so she said, that “it was very
like the words of the title, “Look! We have come through”, and
also that she “was moving with a rhythmic motion similar to that
suggested by the curves and lines on the wrapper of the book”.
She added that she had some sensation of pleasure in remembering
this image, and she had a feeling that there was something sexual
about the sensation. This image, she now remembered, had been
identical in all details each time (two or three in all) it had
appeared in this childhood stage: since the age of six, till that
night, it had never recurred.
Some points of interest in this revived memory would seem
to be as follows:
(1) The question as to whether this is a birth-fantasy evolved
from fantasy proper, or whether it can be founded on sensations
actually experienced in the birth-process. ‘
(2) The interpretation given to the title “Look! We have come
through”. For days preceding the day on which she glanced at
the book in my room, she had been considering her own problem,
and how she should resolve it, and “come through” to a more
harmonious situation (she herself actually used the phrase “come
through”). Yet when the book came to memory four days later,
this association was entirely absent (she commented on this with
surprise in the following analysis, saying, “How strange that I never
thought of the more ordinary meaning of the title—to come
through some experience or difficulty”) and the one directly
connected with her own phobia was present.
(3) The repetition of the image in childhood in identical form
as far as she remembered.
(4) The physical sensation revived by the “cubist” cover-design.
This suggests that possibly some explanation of the ‘dislike of
cubist forms may be found in the sexual Suggestion they convey.
A SUBSTITUTIVE MEMORY
by
ERNEST JONES, London.
A patient was temporarily unable to recollect the word “sepia’
and while he was trying to do so four substitutive words, ob-
viously incorrect, came to his mind instead. Two of these were
the words “bastard” and “Lebanon”, and I propose to describe
only the analysis of the latter.
His first association after ultimately recalling the word “sepia”
was the curious feeling that the last two letters ought to be
separated from each other, 7, g. that “I” (which he interpreted as
meaning himself) should not be in contact with “A”. This was
followed by a series of associations all of a feminine connotation,
indicating that the word “sepia” was connected with the idea of
femininity. His first knowledge of the word dated from childhood
from a tube of what he called “brown sticky stuff” in his sister’s
paint-box, and I surmised that it was probably related at that time,
as is almost invariably the case in childhood, to some forbidden
smearing impulse.
The word “Lebanon” brought the following associations:
Cedars of Lebanon — cedar-wood oil — the use of this for
the high-power oil-immersion lens — the memory that on the
previous day he has spent several hours examining his own
semen microscopically to find out how long spermatozoa could
remain alive — his current interest in this topic because of his
wish not to impregnate a girl with whom he was just entering
into an intimate relationship (cp. the other substitutive word
“bastard”, and his first association that he was not to be brought
into too close contact with something feminine) — a passage he
had once read to the effect that recurrent masturbation (from
which he suffered) led to the emission of a brown fluid instead
of semen, a state of affairs to be avoided.
It is known that the idea of impregnation is often unconsciously
equated to that of contamination with other bodily material, an
273 18*
274 | ERNEST JONES
association doubtless dating from early childhood theories and one
which persists in its crude form in the perversions of throwing
ink, defiling statues, etc, and it is probable that the inhibition
responsible for the forgetting of the word “sepia” emanated from
the group of fears and prohibitions indicated above. But the main
interest of the example is the truly extraordinary displacement
from these ideas to the word “Lebanon”, one evidently facilitated
by the identity of the first syllable in the three words “sepia”,
“semen”, “cedar”.
COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
EDITORIAL NOTE
As was indicated in the first number, we propose to publish
in each of the numbers of the first Volume collective reviews
dealing with the progress of the past six years. Reviews and
abstracts of current work will begin only with the second volume.
The collective reviews of the present and next numbers are trans-
lated from the “Bericht tiber die Fortschritte der Psychoanalyse
in den Jahren 1914—1919”, but it should be noted that they are
greatly condensed, so that readers who wish fuller accounts, and
also more complete bibliographies, are advised to procure the
original review?.
THEORY OF INSTINCT AND SEXUALITY
by
ED. HITSCHMANN, Vienna.?
BIBLIOGRAPHY ®
1. Abraham, K.: Uber Einschrankungen und Umwandlungen der Schaulust
bei den Psychoneurotikern nebst Bemerkungen tiber ana-
loge Erscheinungen in der Vdlkerpsychologie. Jahrb.
B. VI, S. 25.
2. Lbid.: Untersuchungen iber die fritiheste pragenitale Entwick-
lungsstufe der Libido. Zest. B. IV, S. 71.
3. Lbid.: Uber eine konstitutioneile Grundlage der lokomotorischen
Angst. Ze/t, B. Il, S, 143.
4. Thid.: Ohrmuschel und Gehdrgang als erogene Zone. Zeys¢. B. II,
5:27,
1 Published as “Beiheft” Nr. II of the Jnternat. Zettsdhr. f, Psychoanal.
2 Translated by J. C. Fligel.
* In the following Bibliographies .fa4r6, stands for jahrbud& der Psydo-
analyse, Zett. for Internationale Zeitsdhrift fiir Psydhoanalyse and ZAf, for
Zentralblatt fir Psydoanalyse.
275
276 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
5. lbid.: Uber Ejaculatio praecox. Zest, B. IV, S. 171.
6. Andreas-Salome, L.: “Anal” und “Sexual”. Jago, B. IV, S. 249.
”. Ibid. Psychosexualitat. Z.f/ Sexualwissenschhaft, B.1V,S.1 u. 49.
8. Freud, S.: Drei Abhandlungen zur Sexualtheorie. 3. Aufl. 1915.
9. lhid:: Triebe und Triebschicksale. Zev, B. III, S. 84.
10. lbid.: Uber Triebumsetzungen insbesondere der Analerotik. Zeit.
B. IV, S. 125,
11. Lbid.: Aus der Geschichte einer infantilen Neurose. K]. Schriften
zur Neurosenlehre. IV. Folge, 1918.
12, lbid.: “Kin Kind wird geschlagen.” Zest. B. V, S. 151.
13. lbid.: Vorlesungen zur Einfihrung in die Psychoanalyse. Teil III:
Allgemeine Neurosenlehre, 1917.
14. lbid.; Das Tabu der Virginitaét. Kl. Schriften zur Neurosenlehre.
IV. Folge.
15. Lbid.: Zur Einfihrung des Narzifmus. .ja4rh. B. VI, S. 1.
16. Ferenczi, .S.: Von Krankheits- oder Pathoneurosen. Zest, B. IV, S. 219.
17. Galant, S.: Sexualleben im Sauglings- und Kindesalter. Neuro/fog.
Zentralblatt, Nr. 20, 1919.
18. Hattingberg, H.v.: Analerotik, Angstlust und Eigensinn. Zert. II, S. 244.
19. jones, E.: Uber analerotische Charakterziige. Zest. B. V, S. 69.
20. Liebermann, H.: Die erogenen Zonen. Z. f: Sexualwissenscaft, B. I, S. 383
u. 424.
21. Nadmansohn, M.: Freuds Libidotheorie verglichen mit der Eroslehre
Platos. Zev. B. Ill, S. 65.
. Ophuijsen, 7. H. W. van: Beitrage zum Mannlichkeitskomplex der Frau.
Zert, B. IV, S. 241.
23. Rank, O.: Die Nacktheit in Sage und Dichtung. Jago, B. II,
S. 267 u. 409.
Zur Psychoanalyse der Kriegsneurosen. Int. psychoanalyt.
Bib. Nr. 1, 1919.
25. Weiffeld, M.: Uber die Umwandlungen des Affektlebens. Zest B. II,
S. 419.
24. Various:
Libido : Narcissism : The Taboo of Virginity
Psycho-Analysis continues to conceive of the Libido (Sexual Hunger) as
distinct from other sou'ces of psychic energy, aS possessing its own peculiar
chemical characteristics and as constituting a quantitatively variable force,
in terms of which processes and changes in the field of sexuality. can con-
veniently be measured (8). The direct psychic equivalent of the Libido related
to the activity of the various bodily organs is termed £go0-Libido; when this
energy is directed to an outer object, or is transferred from one outer object
to another, it is called Object-Libido. When it is withdrawn from an outer
object and turned once more upon the Self, it again becomes Ego-Libido or
Narcissistic Libido. This narcissistic direction of the Libido to the Self
corresponds to the original condition found in early childhood (Primary
Narcissism), but when,
as in Schizophrenia (the study of which has proved
THEORY OF INSTINCT AND SEXUALITY 277
of the greatest value in this connection) the Libido is withdrawn from persons
and things in the outer world and redirected towards the Self (in so doing
giving rise to Megalomania), we speak of Secondary Narcissism. The sexual
activity of the Narcissistic stage of childhood is auto-erotic. Narcissism may
be regarded as corresponding on the side of the Libido to what Egoism
is on the side of the Ego impulses; Narcissism being thus the libidinous
complement of Egoism (13); The self becoming in fact an object of libidinous
desire. The recognition of this condition is of the greatest importance
for the understanding of the Narcissistic neuroses (Dementia Praecox, Paranoia,
Melancholia). In these diseases the Libido regresses to the Narcissistic stage,
just as in the Transference neuroses (Hysteria and Obsessional Neurosis) it
regresses to early objects of love or to the objects of the various partial impulses
or pre-genital stages of organization, The War Neuroses (24) and the disorders
called by Ferenczi (15) Patho-Neuroses likewise exhibit connections with
Narcissism. A Narcissistic withdrawal of the Libido also takes place in organic
disease, in sleep and in Hypochondria. Further material for the study of
Narcissism is provided by the love-life. The state of being in love involves
a concentration of almost the whole available Libido upon the loved object.
There are two main types of object-love: first, the Dependence Type,
in which the object represents ultimately the mother or nurse who provides
food or the father who provides protection ; secondly, the Narcissistic type
in which the object represents: (a) the lover, as he actually is, (b) as he was,
(c) as he would like to be, or (d) a part of himself (¢. g. his child). The
Narcissistic type of object-love is of importance in Pathology, ¢. g. in
certain forms of Melancholia, Homosexuality etc.
As a substitute for the lost Narcissism of childhood an Ego-ideal may be
erected, which then becomes the object of self-love. For the sake of this
ideal, everything is repressed which is not worthy of the Self. Conscience is
a mechanism which is constantly engaged in observing and criticizing our
actual Self and comparing it with the ideal Self; the same mechanism being
responsible for the critical or abusive voices heard in Paranoia, and also for
‘the dream censor. (15). The existence of Narcissism in childhood constitutes
the strongest argument against Alfred Adler’s assumption of a primary feeling
of inferiority in the child. Psycho-Analysis has indeed recognised the existence
and significance of the “masculine protest” but has regarded it as originating
from the Castration Complex. This complex, which is of great importance
for the development of the Self, is intimately connected with the breaking up
of primary Narcissism and with the establishment of the early sexual inhibitions.
The Castration Complex means, for the boy, pride in his penis or anxiety
about it as a result of feelings of guilt or threats of punishment; for the
girl feelings of bitterness or envy together with the idea of having suffered
some infantile injury or humiliation. The desire to be a boy leads to the
“masculinity complex”, to the tendency to imitate men (22). Many boys and
girls start with the infantile theory that both sexes originally possessed a
penis. The Castration Complex, which plays a most important rdle in the
Unconscious, and therefore also in dreams, seems also to have a phylogenetic
origin; it is of great significance for the development of character as well
as for Neurosis.
278 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
In a new contribution to the Psychology of Love Life entitled “74e Taboo
of Virginity’ (14) Freud discusses the not unusual case of frigidity (and
occasional hostility) on the part of the wife at the beginning of marriage,
the chief factors being found in the injury to Narcissism caused by defloration,
disappointment at lack of the expected gratification at the first coitus, ixation
on the father or brother, and the penis envy connected with the Castration
Complex.
Pregenital Organizations
sf. e. organizations of the sexual life in which the genital zone has not
yet assumed a predominant position (8). The Oral or Cannibalistic stage
corresponds to the first of these organizations. The sexual aim at this stage
consists in the incorporation or eating of the object (the prototype of the
subsequent process of Identification) The process of pleasure-sudking, in which
the sexual activity is dissociated from the function of nutrition and finds its
gratification through the individual's own body, may be regarded as a relic
of this stage. |
A second pre-genital phase corresponds to the Sadistic-Anaf Organization,
in which is already contained a polarity which may be called, if not masculine
and feminine, at least active and passive; the activity arising through the
“impulse to mastery” connected with the forceful use of the musculature,
while the anal region is chiefly connected with passivity.
The neurotic disturbances of eating which arise in connection with the
Oral organization have been described by Abraham with great wealth of
illustration (2) and also by Freud (11). A striking proof of the sexual nature
of sucking (concerning which so much doubt has been expressed by critics)
is furnished by the characteristic record of a healthy girl (17), As is well
known, in Obsessional Neurosis there is a regression to the stage of Anal-
Sadistic organization.
The Development and History of the Sexual Instincts
is discussed by Freud in connection with a theoretical consideration of the
nature of Instinct (9). The sexual instincts may undergo changes of the
following kind: — conversion into their opposites, direction on to the Self,
Repression, Sublimation. In the first of these cases there is a change from
activity to passivity (¢. g. from Sadism to Masochism or from Observationism
to Exhibitionism); a reversal of content occurs only in the conversion of
love into hate. In the second case there is a change of object without
change in the nature of the desire, as for instance in Obsessional Neurosis,
where Sadism is converted into Self-punishment, (Sympathy is not a conversion
of, but a reaction against, Sadism). The fact that throughout later life the
passive component of an instinct is always found to co-exist with its active
complement finds expresson in the general Ambivalency of the instincts.
The conversion from active to passive and the direction of instincts on to
the Self are intimately connected with the Narcissistic stage of development.
THEORY OF INSTINCT AND SEXUALITY 279
Instinct Conversions in Anal-erotism
A certain variable portion of the energy of the Anal-erotic instinct is
lost to the sexual life through Repression, Sublimation or conversion into
character traits; the remainder is taken up into the new organization (10).
Faeces (Money, Gift), Child and Penis are mutually convertible terms in
the Unconscious. In neurotic women the infantile desire for a penis is
sometimes transformed ‘into a desire for a child (cf. the symbol of the
“little one” used in both cases), or sometimes also into the desire for a
husband in favourable cases of which Narcissistic self-love will be converted
into object-love, a masculine attitude into a feminine one.
In virtue of the infantile cloacal theory of birth, the child also becomes
an object of anal-erotic interest. The faeces represent the first present that
the child gives as a sign of love. Defiance is connected with postponement
of the act of defaecation, which at first occurs as a means of auto-erotic
gratification, later on as means of self-assertion. |
The interest in faeces passes, via the idea of gift, to the interest in gold
and money. Phantasies originally conceived in genital terms (the Penis in the
Vagina) may be translated into anal terms (Penis=Faeces, Vagina= Rectum).
Anal defiance may be taken over into the Castration complex — the
absence of the penis in women being taken to mean that the, penis is —
like faeces — removable from the body.
Jones deals very exhaustively with the subject of anal-erotic character
traits (19). \
Observationism, together with its inhibitions and transformations, is fully
treated by Abraham (1) who describes examples of analogous phenomena
from Folk Psychology. Rank (23) deals with the subject of Nakedness in
Myth and Legend in connection with Observationism and Exhibitionism.
The infantile pleasure in movement and locomotion (muscle erotism) is
the ultimate constitutional basis of the tendency to locomotor anxiety (including
Agora: hobia) (3).
Very early sadistic and masochistic phantasies in which “a child is beaten”
are shown by Freud (12) to have their origin in the Oedipus complex, a fact
which makes it probable that a similar origin could be demonstrated in the
case of the other perve:sions. Incidentally the results are shown to be
incompatible with Adler’s theory of the origin of neuroses and perversions
through the ‘‘masculine protest”.
The “masculinity complex” of certain women originates in the Castration
complex (22), though it also shows connections with infantile clitoris mastur-
bation and with urethral erotism, as in the case of frigidity in women where
the glans clitoridis has so to speak drawn away all excitability to itself.
Abraham (5) finds in men who suffer from ejaculatio praecox that genital
sensitivity is centred on the perinaeum, the penis being relatively unexcitable.
This region corresponds developmentally to the Introitus Vaginae. The relation
between ejaculatio praecox and female frigidity may be formulated as follows:
— that erogenous zone, which (in virtue of the sex of the individual) should
properly be predominant has abdicated in favour of the region corresponding
to the predominant erogenous zone of the opposite sex (5).
280
Our views on
COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
infantile sexual investigation and sexual knowledge have
been enriched by the assumption of common Auman phantasies of phylogenetic
origin concerning seduction in childhood, observation of parental coitus and
the threat of castration (13), the effect of the past history of human culture
thus manifesting itself in the psychology of the individual child (11).
SPECIAL PATHOLOGY AND THERAPY OF THE NEUROSES
. Abraham, K::
. Lhid.:
. Lbid.:
. Lbid.:
. Deutsch, Helene:
. Eisler, .:
. Ferenczi, S.:
lbid.:
. Lhid.:
. Lhid.:
. Freud, S.:
. Lbid.:
- Freud, Ferenczi, Abraham, Simmel und Jones: Zur Psychoanalyse der
. Holfds, L.:
. Kaplan, M.:
. Landauer, K.:
. Retkh, Th.:
. Sadger, ji:
. Lhid.:
. Simmel, E.:
‘ Translated by
AND PSYCHOSES
by
KARL ABRAHAM, Berlin.1
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Uber eine konstitutionelle Grundlage der lokomotorischen
Angst. Ze/t, B. II, S. 143.
Das Geldausgeben im Angstzustand. Zey¢, B. IV, S. 252.
Uber Ejaculatio praecox. Zest, B. IV, S. 171.
Bemerkungen zu Ferenczis Mitteilung titber “Sonntags-
neurosen”. Zest. B. V, S. 203.
Ein kasuistischer Beitrag zur Kenntnis des Mechanismus
der Regression bei Schizophrenie. Zest, B. V, S. 41.
Ein Fall von krankhafter ‘“‘Schamsucht”. Ze/¢, B. V, S. 193.
Einige klinische Beobachtungen bei der Paranoia und Para-
phrenie. Zest. B. Il, S. 11.
Psychogene Anomalien der Stimmlage. Zert, B. III, S. 25.
Uber zwei Typen der Kriegsneurose. Zey¢, B. Py. 13t,
Sonntagsneurosen. Zest. B. V, S. 46.
Mitteilung eines der psychoanalytischen Theorie wider-
sprechenden Falles von Paranoia. Zeyt, B. Ill, S. 321.
Trauer und Melancholie. Zest B. IV, S. 288.
Kriegsneurosen. Int. Psychoanalyt. Bib., Nr. 1, 1919.
Psychoanalytische Beleuchtung eines Falles von Dementia
praecox. Zest, B. II, S 367.
Der Beginn eines Verfolgungswahnes. Zest, B. IV, S. 330.
Spontanheilung einer Katatonie. Zest, B. Il, S, 441.
Zur lokomotorischen Angst. Ze/t, B. Ti, |S. 515.
Ein Beitrag zum Verstandnis des Tic. Zest, B. II, S. 354.
Ein merkwirdiger Fall von Nachtwandeln und Mondsucht.
Zeit. B. IV, S. 254.
Kriegsneurosen und psychisches Trauma. Ihre gegenseiti-
gen Beziehungen, dargestellt auf Grund psychoanalytischer,
hypnotischer Studien. 1918.
Douglas Bryan.
SPECIAL PATHOLOGY AND THERAPY 281
21. Stdrde, A.: Rechts und links in der Wahnidee. Zest, B. II, S. 431.
22. Lbid.s Ein einfacher Lach- und Weinkrampf. Zest. B. V, S. 199.
23. Zausk, V.: Zur Psychologie des alkoholischen Beschaftigungsdelirs.
Zeit. B. Ill, S, 204.
24. Lbid.: Uber eine besondere Form von Zwangsphantasien. Ze/t.
B. IV, 8. 52.
25. Lbid.: Bemerkungen zu Abrahams Aufsatz “Uber Ejaculatio prae-
cox.” Zert. B. IV, S. 315.
26. Lhid.: Uber die Entstehung des “Beeinflussungsapparates” in der
Schizophrenie. Ze/t. B. V, S. 1.
27. Wulff M.: Simulation oder Hysterie? Zest. B. II, S. 259.
A. Conversion and Anxiety Hysteria
JStdrcdke (22) demonstrates the combined action of opposite repressed
impulses in the symptoms of a rare hysterical case, and discusses the relation
of the symptoms to narcissism and to different erotogenic zones.
Wulff (27) points out that simulated symptoms in a hysterical patient
of his were determined by unconscious factors similar to those in ge-
nuine cases,
Sadger (19) in a case of sleep-walking and “moonstruckness” traces back
this condition to the longing of the son for the mother, the son having
frequently observed sexual intercourse between the parents. (The moon
serves as a symbol for the mother, just as the sun commonly represents the
father.)
Ferenczt (8) describes a difference observed in two young men between
higher and lower voice pitch according to the homosexual (female) or hetero-
sexual attitude of the impulse.
Ferenczi (10) has noted temporary neuroses or exacerbations of existing
nervous troubles which regularly took place on Sundays or holidays. He traces
back the phenomenon to the cessation of the pressure of work carried out
on other days. The neurotic cannot deal with the free libido which periodi-
cally accumulates and which is one of the reasons for the institution of
“holidays”, it becomes repressed and converted into nervous symptoms
(Cyclothymia).
Abraham (4) supplements Ferenczi’s views by alluding to the frequent
cases in which those disposed to neuroses, or neurotics, can only keep well
while at their daily work, this signifying to them a substitute-gratification.
As soon as this activity is interrupted they are at the mercy of the neurosis.
Eisler (6) points out the connection between morbid blushing and onanism.
He looks upon the blushing as a conversion symptom (displacement from
below upwards). There originally existed with the masturbation a tendency
to exhibit which was transferred from the genitals to that part of the body
that is permanently uncovered.
Abraham (1) shows that the recognised factors, fixation on definite per-
sons, evading of temptation, etc., do not suffice for the explanation of the
anxiety relating to active and passive going about, but that one has to assume
282 | COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
that there is a particular sexual constitution with an abnormally strony plea-
sure in active and passive movement. This pleasure on account of its in-
cestuous connections becomes repressed and then furnishes the anxiety,
and during treatment the re-conversion of this into pleasure can be ob-
served,
Rerk (17) comes to similar conclusions, specially referring to the signi-
ficance of the vibration of the genitals in passive movement.
Abraham (3) in his article on ejaculatio praecox points out that in these
cases the glans peuis is not the lea ling erotogenic zone; on the other hand
the perineal portion of the urethra has an abnormally strong erotogenic signi-
ficance. He shows that ejaculatio praecox is a partly pleasurable, partly un-
comfortable flowing away of seminal fluid, and is a direct derivative of the
infantile form of passing urine. The sexuality of these men has lost the active
mal. character. Ejaculatio praecox is quite analogous to frigidity in the fe-
male scx. In these men the urethra and perinaeum are markedly erotogenic.
They are either weak and without energy or alway in a hurry and over-
active. Psycho-analysis reveals in them a high degree of repressed sadism.
The occurrence of ejaculatio praecox makes them safe for the woman; the
penis has lost its power as the sadistic weapon. These patients constantly
have pronounced dread of ca tration; fear to lose the penis is one of the
factors that makes them incapable of coitus. A great part of the sexual re-
sistances of these men is explained by their narcissism. LExhibitionistic im-
pulses cooperate in the tendency to disappoint, degrade and soil the woman.
Tausk (25) thinss that Abraham has under-estimated the significance of
onanism and repressed homosexuality in the aetiology of ejaculatio praecox,
and further that the analogy between ejaculatio praecox and female frigidity
has not been sufficiently proved.
B. Obsessional States
Tausk (24) alludes to the fact that many neurotics have the compulsion
to utter a single and apparently senseless word, and points out that in these
com)ulsive words lie the remains of thought processes which had been at one
time charged with reproach.
Sadger (18) shows that tic serves as a defence against forbidden impulses,
and that it originates in repressed “muscle erotism’”.
Abraham (2) recognises in the compulsive spending of money found in
many neurotics, especially in anxiety states, an equivalent to the giving out
of their libido that is impossible to them along normal paths. (Regression to
the anal zone).
C. War Neuroses
Ferenczi (9) defines two types out of the complicated phenomenology of
the war neuroses. In the one type, which corresponds with the Breuer-Freudian
conversion hysteria, there is a peripheral paralysis, contracture or other local
phenomena. The most important manifestation of the other is anxiety, with
SPECIAL PATHOLOGY AND THERAPY 283
which may be associated different kinds of physical symptoms. He points out
the connection of the symptoms with the repressed memories of a definite
situation from which they started.
Simmel (20) has made use of the cathartic method of Breuer and Freud
as a therapeutic measure in the war neuroses, and refers to the unconscious
roots of the neurotic symptoms; he reports some noteworthy cures. The author,
however, expressly alludes to the great importance of psycho-analysis proper
for the understanding and cure of the war neuroses.
The first volume of the Jwternationale Psydoanalytishe Bibliothek (13)
contains the symposium on the war neuroses held it the Congress in Buda-
pest (1918) and also a contribution by Junes and an introduction by Freud.
Freud's introduction gives some of the chief points of view for the psycho-
analytical consideration of the war neuroses, calling attention to the signi-
ficance of the unconscious, narcissism, etc., and expressly states that the libido
theory of the neuroses is in no way refuted by the experiences of the war.
Ferenczi conclusively shows that in many respects the schools of neuro-
logy have in thcir conception of the war neuroses come nearer to the psycho-
analytical standpoint. After a full survey of the literature on the war neu-
roses he gives a brief account of his own opinion on the subject. He lays
stress on the increased “evo-sensitiveness” of the war neurotic and ascribes
great significance to the far-going regression of their libido to narcissism.
The patients con: uct themselves like little, helpless children, who can do
nothing by themselves, but are completely dependent on the care and attention
of others,
Abraham takes up the point of view of narcissism and refers to its pre-
sence in many men before they fall ill with a war neurosis. In many such
predisposed cases a psychic trauma acts harmfully when it deeply affects the
narcissistic attitude of their own invulnerability and immortality. Organic
traumata, by heightening self-love, tend to protect against neuiosis. The
relap:e into narcissism is an essential cause of the loss of the capacity to
follow military discipline and for the abundance of anal character traits (pension
conflicts!). |
Simmel attributes great value to abreaction during hypnosis, but also
particularly emphasises the value of dream interpretation and makes use of
hypnosis for this purpose allowing the patients to dream in his presence.
He points out that hysterical attacks represent the discharge of repressed
affects which could not be expressed under military discipline. With regard to
his therapeutic resu!ts Simmel reports very favourably.
Jones discusses the question as to how far the experiences of the war
refute or support Freud’s theories. He finds in the war neuroses the motive
of the flight into illness, the fulfilment of repress d wishes, eic. He also comes
to the conclusion that the war neuroses are a reaction against the ego-libido,
#. e. against narcissism.
D. Mental Disturbances
Freud (11) discusses a case which a’ first sight seems to contradict the
theory of paranoia. The “persecutor” of the paranoiac female patient is a
284 | COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
man, whereas according to the theory of paranoiac projection it should be
of the same sex as the patient. However, he shows that the delusion was
originally directed against a female person (representative of the mother), and
that it was only in the paranoia itself that the patient progressed from the
woman to the man.
Kaplan (15) was able to observe in a young man a delusion of persecution
in statu nascendi. The outbreak was the result of the paternal prohibition of
heterosexual practice which drove the libido into narcissistic-homosexual paths.
Stdrake (21) found in the delusions of a mental patient the significance of
right and left which is familiar to us from dreams. He gives the interesting
explanation that left represents the more deeply repressed tendency. In his
case he shows that probably before and behind (genital and anal zone) had
originally the significance which is later taken over by right and left.
Ferencat (7) makes some observations on latent homosexuality, repressed
incest wishes, etc. in mental patients, and also some remarks on the paranoiac
system formation and the connection of catatonic phenomena with sexual
sensations.
Hoffos (14) obtained useful insight into the building up of the psychosis
in an acute mental disturbance. Besides the almost undisguised incest impulses
the repressed pleasure in smell was remarkable.
Landauers (16) found in a catatonic patient a homosexual attitude towards
her step-mother and a hostile attitude towards her father with whom she at
the same time unconsciously identified herself. The spontaneous cure took
place with the reversal of this attitude, which was rendered possible through
transference of the libido on to a somewhat masculine nurse in the institution.
The author discusses at length the narcissistic object-choice and identification.
Tausk (26) in his work on the delusions of being influenced by an
apparatus furnishes a psycho-analytical contribution which deals exhaustively
with the problem. The apparatus represents in the first place the genitals of
_the patient, just as in the dreams of machinery. However, on deeper pene-
tration it appears that the whole body is conceived by the unconscious as a
single genital organ. The author discusses the process of projection by means
of which alterations in the genitals (erection, etc.) are attributed to an ex-
ternal influence. He relates this to narcissism. In the early narcissistic period
the child cannot definitely distinguish between his own bodily impulses (desire
to defaecate, etc.) and the interferences with him on the part of other pers-
ons. The schizophrenic process consists in a regression to this early stage of
the development of the libido.
Deutsdh (5) observed a mental patient who had been blind since two
years of age. She became mentally affected in adult age and then had visual
dreams for the first time. The author assumes that the schizophrenia re-
gressed in the dream to deeper mental layers than is possible in normal
dreams.
Freud (12) deals with the little investigated sphere of melancholia. He
distinguishes between this melancholy and that of sorrow, with which it has
Many traits in common, in that the former relates to a lost object which has
been withdrawn from consciousness. Freud shows that the self-accusations
really refer to the love object by whom the patient has been disappointed.
SPECIAL PATHOLOGY AND THERAPY 285
The intimate relation with the object is deeply affected by this disappoint-
ment and the ego now takes the place of the object, becoming identified with
it. The self-torture of the melancholic and his tendencies to suicide is com-
prehensible from the ambivalency of the feelings. Hate and revenge gratify
themselves on his own ego. Melancholy is really a regression of the libido
into the ego. The change from depression into mania still awaits explanation.
However, the mania certainly contains a feeling of triumph in having overcome
the loss of the object.
FE. Alcoholism
Tausk (23) for the understanding of alcoholic delirium of occupation
refers to a form of dream occurring in neurotic persons, the dream of being
busily occupied. This is similar to the delirium in that the dreamer is actively
occupied with daily affairs and at the same time tormented by the anxiety of
never getting ready. This dream expresses the wish for coitus, concealing the
dread of impotence or other sexual inhibitions. The impulse to onanism
appears in conflict with the coitus wish. The delirium of occupation serves
to present the same tendencies. The alcoholic is heterosexually inhibited. He
resists the homosexuality, likewise auto-erotism; his libido remains therefore
at the object stage. It is of particular interest that doing tasks and work in
the language of the dream, and of the unconscious in general has the meaning
of sexual performance.
PSYCHO-ANALYTIC THERAPY
by
]. H. W. VAN OPHUJJSEN, The Hague. +
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. Abraham, K.: Uber eine besondere Form des neurotischen Widerstandes
gegen die psychoanalytische Methodik. Zest. B. V, S, 173.
2. Ferenczt, S.: Schwindelempfindung nach Schluf der Analysenstunde.
pit. B. dk, Ge, he:
3. Lbid.: Einschlafen der Patienten wahrend der Analyse. Ze/t.
B. Il, S. 274.
4, Lhid.: Diskontinuierliche Analysen. Zev. B. II, S. 514.
5. Lbid.: Technische Schwierigkeiten einer Hysterieanalyse. Zev+.
B. iM yon SA, | |
6. Lhid.: Zur psychoanalytischen Technik. Zert. B. V, S. 181.
7. Freud, JS. Uber fausse reconnaissance (‘‘déja raconté”’) wahrend der
psychoanalytischen Arbeit. Zest. B. II, S, 1.
8. lhid.: Weitere Ratschlage zur Technik der Psychoanalyse (2). Zes#.
B. Il, S. 485.
1 Translated by J. C. Fligel.
286 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
9. lhid.: Weitere Ratschlage zur Technik der Psychoanalyse (3). Zest.
Bi Vivise 4
10. Lbid.: Wege der psychoanalytischen Therapie. Zeit. B. V, S. 61.
11. Lbid.: Vorlesunven zur Einitthrung in div Psychoanalyse. 1918.
12. lbid.: “Kin Kind wird geschlagen.” Zest. B. V, S. 151.
13. Horney, K.: Die Technik der psychoanalytischen Therapie. Zestsdr.
f Sexualwissenschaft. B. IV, S. 185.
14. jung, C. Gz Die Psychologie der unbewuften Prozesse. Schweizer
. Schriften ftir allgemeines Wissen. Heft 1.
15. Kaplan, L.: Giundziige der Psychoanalyse.
16. Loy, R.: Psychotherapeutische Streitfragen.
17. Maeder, A.: Heilung und Entwicklung im Seelenleben. Schweizer
- Schriften fir allgemeincs Wissen. Heft 7.
18. Retk, Th.: Einige Bemerkungen zur Lehre vom Wid:rstande. Zet.
B, I; S, 22.
19. Sdmid: Die neu sten Entwicklungsstadien der Psychoanalyse und
ihre therapeutische Bedeutung. Deutsche medizinische
Wochenschrift. 1914. 8.518.
20. Simmel, E.: Kriegsneurosen und psychisches Trau) a.
21. Stekel, W.: Die verschiedenen Formen des Widerstandes in der psycho-
analytischen Kur. Zentralblatt fiir Psychoanalyse. B. lV,
S. 610.
*
The contention of Jung and his followers that they have arrived at their
new views through the use of the same method as that employed by Freud
has misled many into speaking of Jung’s school of Psycho-Analysis. The
most recent work of Jung (14) brings with it a justification of the suspicion
to which Jones had given expression in the Jahrbuch that “the practice of
the strict rules of psycho-analytic technique has been as half-hearted as has
been the acceptance of psycho-analytic theory and that in the future the
abandonment of the former will follow the renunciation of the latter’. This is
now admitted by Jung, who uses an example of a dream analysis to explain
his use of a new method. Unfortunately his “interpretation” has very little
resemblance to what we are accustomed to regard as such, so that the
great difference between his technique and that of Freud is not sufficiently
apparent. As Maeder (17) has in the meantime also adopted a new “psych-
ology’, it would seem that we are justified in raising an energetic protest
against the use of the expression : — Jung’s school of Psycho-Analysis.
For Freud and his pupils there has — with one exception — been no
occasion to depart from the fundamental rule of Psycho-Analytic procedure
and from the technique resulting therefrom, since this procedure continues
to prove the only fruitful method of penetrating into the depths of the
Unconscious. Horney (18) has devoted a very useful review to this subject,
in the course of which she also discusses the usual forms of Resistance and
Transference. It is 0! course only to be expected that Freud’s Introductory
Lectures on Psycho-Analysis (11) should in more than one connection
emphasize the great significance of this fundamental rule. Thus we find that
PSYCHO-ANALYTIC THERAPY 287
he refers to it in the course of his treatment of symptomatic acts, of dreams
and dream interpretation, and of psycho-analytic therapy. Our critics have
sometimes objected to this kind of repetition. But those who are practically
acquainted with Psycho-Analysis will know from their own experience that
the greatest difficulty of the work lies in the consistent application of this
rule and that nothing is more important than to keep this rule in mind,
especially in those moments in which our therapeutic ambitions might induce
us to attempt to heal without understanding !
Kaplan's work (15) is less calculated than its title might lead us to expect to
produce in the beginner a conviction that satisfactory results, both from the
therapeutic and scientific points of view, can only be obtained by the con-
sistent use of the principle of free association.
Very welcome in this respect are Freud's articles on the practical aspects
of Psycho-Analysis in the course of which he repeatedly asks us to consider
the aim and method of our treatment. His advice on the subject of technique
deserves therefore to be given the chief place of honour in these considerations.
Thus, for instance, he writes (8): — “At first, during the phase of Breuer's
cathartic method, we concentrated on the factor of the symptom formation,
and our efforts were therefore directed towards the reproduction of the
psychic accompaniments of the traumatic situation, in order that they might
then be worked off through conscious activity. Recall and abre.«ction con-
stituted the end which we endeavoured to attain with the help of hypnosis.
Later on, after the abandonment of hypnosis, our chief task consisted in
reconstructing from the free associations of the patient the events which he
refused to remember. Through the work of interpretation and the communi-
cation of the results of this work to th. patient we sought to circumvent the
resistance. We continued to concentrate on the situations responsible for the
symptom formation and on those connected with the onset of the disease,
while abreaction fell into the background and seemed to be replaced by the
expenditure of energy involved in the overcoming of the resistance opposed
to free association (¢. ¢. in the process of following the psycho-analytic rule)
Finally there has been evolved the modern technique, which represents the
logical outcome of previous developments. Here the analyst refrains fiom
concentrating upon any particular factor or problem and contents himself
with the study of the surface of the patient’s mind as it presents itself from
moment to moment, in order to discover the resistances that may be mani-
festing themselves therein and to make the patient conscious of the nature
of these resistances. In this way there comes about a new division of labour:
the analyst discovers for the patient the nature of the (hitherto unknown)
resistances; as soon as these are overcome, the patient will often supply
without any further difficulty the forgotten situations and connections. The
aim of these different procedures has of course remained unchanged: + om
the descriptive point of view, the filling up of the gaps in the patients
memory ; from the dynamic point of view, the overcoming of the resistances
due to repression.” In this connection Freud also says: “The patient does
not remember anything of what he has repressed or forgotten, he acts
it instead. He does not reproduce it as a memory but as an act; he repeats
it, of course without knowing that he is doing so.” It could not have been
19
288 : "COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
more cléarly expressed in what way we have to understand the phenomena
of transference and what position we have to adopt with regard to them.
‘The following exposition deserves also to be quoted in full in this connection:
“We have said that the patient repeats instead of remembering, that he
repeats under the conditions of the resistance. We may now ask the question:
What is it really that he repeats or acts? The answer is, that he repeats all
those aspects of his repressed mentality which have already manifested
themselves openly in his life, his inhibitions, his ill-adapted attitudes towards
“persons or things, his pathological character traits. During treatment he
repeats also all his symptoms. And now we are in a position to note that
in laying emphasis on this compulsive repetition, we have not brought to
light any new fact but have only succeeded in obtaining a more com-
prehensive point of view — a point of view which makes it clear that the
patient's illness cannot come to a sudden stop at the beginning of the
analysis and that we must not look upon his illness as a historical event but
as an active force. Bit by bit the illness comes within our ken and within the
sphere of our therapeutic influence and while the patient experiences each
bit as it comes up as something real and actual, we on our part have to
perform our therapeutic functions with reference to this bit — a task that
consists in great part in establishing connections with the past. The calling
up of memories under the influence of hypnosis conveyed the impression of
an experiment in the laboratory. In the process of repetition during analytic
treatment according to the new technique, we are, as it were, conjuring up
a piece of real life itself... .” |
Before we go on to consider from this point of view the publications
dealing with the special difficulties connected with the accurate employment
of psycho-analytic technique, it will be well to deal with Ferenczi’s article
(5), which, as already indicated, points to an exception as regards the rigid
adherence to the psycho-analytic rule. The writer describes the case of a
female hysteric, who in the course of her treatment — which was several
times interrupted — always arrived at a certain point and then failed to
progress farther. “In the course of her constantly repeated love phantasies,
which were always concerned with the person of the physician, she sometimes
made the apparently casual remark that she ‘had feelings down below’ /. e¢
had erotic sensations in the genitals. Only after some time did I happen to
notice that she kept her legs crossed during the whole hour that she was
lying on the sofa. This led us — not for the first time — to the subject
of onanism, which is most frequently performed in the case of women and
girls by rubbing together the legs. As she had done on previous occasions,
she vigorously denied ever having indulged in such practices.” “I must
confess .. . that some further time passed before I hit upon the idea of
forbidding her to adopt this position. I explained to her that it represented
a disguised form of onanism. which unostentatiously drained off the un-
conscious impulses, leaving only useless fragments to appear in the
material of the associations. The result of this step I can only describe
as foudroyant. The accustomed channel for draining off energy into
genital paths being now closed, that patient was tormented during
treatment hours’ by an almost intolerable restlessness of mind and body; she
PSYCHO-ANALYTIC THERAPY 289
was no longer able to lie still but had to be continually changing her pos-
ition. Her phantasies resembled the delirium of fever in which long buried
memory fragments reappeared and gradually grouped themselves around cer-
tain events of childhood and allowed one to discover the principal traumatic
sources of the illness.” After the writer had forbidden the patient to indulge
_in unconscious onanism even outside treatment hours (which enabled him to
discover that the most varied symptomatic acts were used as equivalents of
onanism), after he had also forbidden her to indulge a desire for frequent
micturition which had then appeared, and after the patient had for a time
indulged in real masturbation in order to alleviate her tension, she was
eventually able to enjoy normal sexual life, of which she had before been
incapable. The succesful result which the writer was able to achieve with
the help of his prohibition in a case in which no permanent effect would
otherwise have been obtained enables him to establish the following new
rule: during treatment we must keep in mind the possibility of disguised
onanism or Onanism equivalents, and where we notice igns of them, we must
abolish them. After further discussion of disguised onanism and the difference
between this and actively practised masturbation, he continues: ‘‘We owe to
Freud himself the first example of “active therapy’. When a similar stagnation
had come about during the analysis of cases of Anxiety Hysteria, he resorted
to the expedient of asking patients to put themselves in just those critical
situations which were calculated to arouse their fear, not indeed in order to
make the patients “get used” to the things that alarmed them, but to free
the affect from its false associations. In this case we work under the assumption
that the increased amount of unsatisfied free-floating affect thus produced will
be directed principally to more “adequate” ideas ¢ ¢. those which are most
naturally connected with it in the course of the development of the individual.
Here also, therefore, as in our case, the procedure consists in closing certain
acquired unconscious paths along which energy has been drained off and in
thus bringing about a preconscious occupation and unconscious translation of
the repressed material.” We may here reproduce the passage from Freud's
article (10) that Ferenczi has in mind: “Our technique has developed in
connection with the treatment of hysteria and is still adapted in the first
place to the requirements of this disorder. But we need go no further than
the phobias in order to realize that as regards procedure we must mike an
advance beyond our previous standpoint: for we shall scarcely gain the mastery
over a phobia by simply waiting until the patient is induced to give up his
phobia as a result of the analysis; under these circumstances he will never
bring into the analysis the material that is essential for a convincing solution
of the phobia. We must proceed differently. Let us take the example of an’
agoraphobia. There are two degrees of this trouble, a lighter and a more severe
form. Patients suffering from the lighter form always experience fear when they
walk alone in the streets, but they have not for this reason given up going
out alone; those suffering from the more severe form protect themselves from
fear by never going out alone.’ With these latter we can only be successful,
if we can induce them as a result of the analysis to behave'like patients of
the first class, ¢ ¢. to walk in the street and while so doing to battle with-
their fear. We have therefore'in the first place to reduce the phobia suffi-
19*
290 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
ciently to make this possible; only when, at the doctor’s request, the patient
has taken this step, will he be able to produce those associations which can
bring about the solution of the phobia”, From this it is clearly apparent that
Ferenczi is justified in asserting that he is only following the example set
by Freud,
In the case of Obsessional Neurosis also, an active therapy is suggested
by Freud, who says: “There seems to me little doubt that the only correct
procedure in these cases is to wai until the treatment has itself become a
compulsion, and then to use this counter-compulsion as a means of forcibly
suppressing the compulsicn due to the disease.”
In the paper to which we have already referred (8) Freud considers
further the dangers to which the process of “repetition” may give rise. The
analyst must aim as far as possible at actual reproduction and conscious re-
collection. He must prepare himself for a continuous conflict with the patient
in order to retain in psychic territory all those impulses which the patient
would like to drain off into motility; he may indeed regard it as a successful
piece of treatment, when.ver something has been worked off in memory that
the patient would otherwise merely have expressed in action... We can
best protect the patient from the harm that may result to him from the
carrying out of his impulses, by pledging him not to make any definite de-
cision that may affect his whcle life (¢. g. the choice of a career or of a
permanent love-object) while he is under treatment but to postpone any such
decisions until he has recovered. ... But the principal means of controlling
the patient’s tendency to repetition and of converting this into a motive for
remembering lies in the manipulation of the Transference. We render this
tendency harmless, even useful, by allowing it to have full play within a given
field. The transference is open to the patient as a tumbling ground in which
he may develop in almost complete freedom and in which he is enjoined to
exhibit to us all the pathological impulses that may be buried in his mind.
If the patient will only show us such consideration as will cause him to
respect the essential conditions of the treatment, we succeed regularly in
bringing his symptoms into a new connection (4 ¢. a connection with the
Transference) and in substituting for his previous neurosis a new Trans-
ference-Neurosis, which can then be cured by our therapeutic work. The
transference constitutes thus an intermediate state between disease and
- healthy life, a state drough which the patient has to travel in passing from the
former condition to the latter. This new state takes on all the characteristics
of the disease, but it represents an artifical diseas., which is everywhere open
to our attacks. It is at the same time a piece of real experience, but one
that is made possible only through peculiarly favourable conditions and is
provisional in nature, Well known paths lead from the “repetition” actions,
as they show themselves in the Transference, to the awakening of the ne-
cessary memories —- memories that appear without effort as soon as the re-
sistance is overcome.”
It seemed to the reviewer essential to give these extraordinarily important
considerations in extenso, since they are able to explain the present position
in psycho-analytical science in a way that would otherwise be impossible, and
are of unusual importance for the guidance of the practical psycho-analyst:
PSYCHO-ANALYTIC THERAPY 291
The following sentences may serve to conclude this section of our
review: (8) “As is well known, the process of overcoming the resistances is
begun by the phy ician’s discovering the resi-tance — which is never re-
cognised by the patient — and then communicating it to the patient. It
seems that beginners in Psycho-Analysis are inclined to regard this intro-
ductory process as constituting the whole of the work... We must allow
the patient time to immerse himself in this resistance (of which he is now
conscious), to work through it and to overcome it — by cairying on the
woik according to the psycho-analytic rule in spite of it. Only when they
have reached the point of most intense resistance do patient and doctor
through their combined work discover the repressed tendencies which are
feeding the resistan: es — tendencies as regards the existence and strength of
which the patient would otherwise have failed to be convinced. In this the physician
can do nothing but await the copletion of the process — a process that
cannot be avoided and that cannct always be hurried. If he keeps this point
of view in mind, he will often save himself from the mistake of thinking that
he has failed in cases where he is really conducting the treatment on per-
fectly correct lines.”
Abraham (1) describes a special form of neurotic resistance against the
psycho-analytic technique, which consis!s in a retusal of the patient to follow
the rule of free association, not only — as happens in every case — on
certain special occasions, but throughout the whole course of the treatment.
“The patients here referred to will hardly ever spontaneously admit that no
associations have occurred to them. They indulge rather in a continuous,
uninterrupted, logical discourse, some of them refusing even to allow their
flow of words to be interrupted by any observations made by the physician.
But they do not give themselves up to free association. They do not speak
spontaneously, but according to a programme... The analyst whose eyes
have not yet been opened to the form of resistance presented by these
patients is apt to be deceived by their apparently willing and u'tiring co-
operation in the analysis. Their resistance hides itself behind a false amen-
ability.” Abraham has been able to show that in all these cases there exists a
process of Identification with the analyst, on the pattern of an identification
with the father, and that an unusually strong development of Narcissism
constitutes the ground from which the form of resistance springs. The
patients manifest an unusual degree of defiance; they grudge the analyst his
réle of father, they submit themselves to him unwilingly or not at all,
they think they know everything better than he does. They desire the
analyst to take no part in their treatment and want to do everything alone
by their own efforts. An element of envy is unmistakably present in their
behaviour. Well marked sadistic-anal traits were manifested in all the cases
that were treated or examined. In apparent contradiction with the well-known
frugality of anal-erotics is the tact that these patients willingly make material
sacrifices in order to continue the treatment, which naturally requires much
time. This is to be explained by the circumstance that they enjoy making
sacrifices, if only their Narcissism fivds satisfaction thereby. Abraham lays
great weight on an exhaustive analysis of this Narcissism, particularly in its
relations to the father-cumplex.
A
292 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
Ferenczi discusses a number of ways in which the resistance of the
patient may lead him to depart from a strict adherence to the psycho-
analytic rule (6), There are some obsessional neurotics who, as though
purposely misunderstanding the instructions of the analyst, produce only
senseless associations. Sometimes indeed they will go a step further and
will ask the analyst what they are to do if their associations do not consist
of words but take the form of inarticulate sounds, melodies or the cries of
animals. Sometimes the analyst may be able to extract from the senseless
associations the meaning that the patient desires to hide, but in every case
we may recognise the evil intention that causes the patient to behave in
this way. Another way in which this “‘association resistance” may show itself
is the familiar assertion that the patient can think of “nothing”. It often
happens that patients do not interpret the psycho-analytic rule literally
enough. In all these cases it appears that there is something that they wish
to conceal. If further explanations are of no avail, it is often best to answer
the silence of the patient with a corresponding silence on the part of the
analyst. Nor need we be alarmed if, as sometimes happens, the patient
threatens to fall asleep during the analysis. Even if this actually happens,
the sleep is as a rule of very short duration. The analyst is occasionally
asked what is to happen if it suddenly occurs to the patient to carry out
some action, e. g. to run away, to attack the analyst or to destroy some-
thing. The answer to this question is of course that the patient is instructed
to say and not to do everything that occurs to him. His fear lest the
thought should prove too strong for him is to be traced back to its infantile
roots. In a few cases the patient may indeed resort to action of various
kinds. The best technique in these circumstances is to allow the patient to
fulfil his impulse; if the analyst is patient, the impulse to action is in
most cases soon over. In all cases the analyst must insist that the patient
must not spare himself the trouble that may be necessary before he can
pronounce certain (obscene) words. |
Reik (18) and Stekel (21) are also concerned with the problem of
resistance, particularly in so far as it springs from feelings of a negative
character. Both authors give a series of examples from psycho-analytic
practice which are well calculated to impress the student with the difficulties
that may be encountered in the course of psycho-analytic work. The short
and somewhat sketchy paper of Stekel does not afford much help in the
face of these difficulties. Reik has made an attempt to analyse the resistance
into its constituents and comes to the conclusion that three principal com-
ponents are at work: narcissistic tendencies, hostile tendencies (and the
homosexual trends that are intimately associated therewith) and anal-erotic
tendencies. It would carry us too far, were we to reproduce his views i”
extenso here. |
The interesting theme of the transference on the part of the analyst
towards his patient — the so called counter-transference — is discussed by,
Freud (9), Ferenczi (6) and Reik (18), The essential condition for the
control of the counter-transference is to be found of course. in the previous
analysis of the analyst himself; but even those who have been subjected to
a previous analysis are not so independent of peculiarities of character or
PSYCHO-ANALYTIC THERAPY 293,
fluctuations of mood as do away with the necessity for keeping a careful watch.
upon the counter-transference. Only gradually does the analyst become able
to avoid the dangers involved in showing too much or too little interest, in
identifying the patient’s interests with his own on the one hand or in treat-
ing them roughly, unsympathetically or impatiently on the other (Reik’s
Counter-Resistance). This ability when acquired allows the analyst to permit
the free working of his own Unconscious, a procedure which makes possible
an intuitive understanding of the expressions of the patient’s Unconscious
which are concealed beneath his manifest words and gestures. As Freud
says’ “The technique consists simply in refraining from making any special
effort to note particular facts and in devoting the same ‘even flowing’
attention to everything that one hears..... This attitude is the necessary
counterpart to that which the patient is instructed to adopt, /. ¢ to say
everything that occurs to him without criticism or selection. The rule as
regards the analyst may be formulated thus: he should exclude all conscious
influences from his- attention and give himself up entirely to this ‘uncon-
scious memory’, or (expressed purely from the point of view of technique)
he should listen to what is said without troubling himself as to whether he
is noting anything”. In this connection reference should be made to what
is described by Freud as “fausse reconnaissance” during psycho-analysis (7).
‘It happens not infrequently that the patient accompanies the communi-
cation of some memory with the words ‘But I have told you about that
before’, although the analyst on his part feels certain that he has never
before heard of the communicated fact. If the analyst then denies that he
has previously been told about it, the patient will reply that he is certain
that he has told it, is ready to swear that this is the case etc., the analyst's
own conviction of the contrary becoming in the meantime all the stronger.
It would of course be quite unpsychological to attempt to settle this dif-
ference by mere strength of assurance or violence of protestation. Such
feelings of confidence in the accuracy of one’s memory have, as we are well
aware, no objective value, and since one of the two persons must necessarily
be in error, it may just as well be the analyst as the patient who is guilty
of the paramnesia. The analyst must admit this, break off the discussion and
wait till a later occasion for an opportunity of settling the matter.
“In a minority of cases the analyst will then remember to have heard
the communication in question and will discover at the same time the sub-
jective, often far-fetched, motive responsible for his temporary forgetfulness.
In the great majority of cases, however, it is the patient who was mistaken
and who can also be brought to recognise his mistake. The explanation of
this frequent occurrence seems to be that the patient has in reality had
the intention of making the communication in question, that he has on one or
more occasions actually made some preparatory remarks for this purpose,
but has then been prevented by the resistance from carrying out his intent-
ion, and at a later date confuses the intention with the execution of what
“he had intended”.
Further, mention should be made in this review of a work, which as
regards the technique described therein, cannot properly be considered as
constituting an advance; this is Simmel’s treatise on War Neuroses and
294 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
Psychic Trauma (20). The treatment here used may be regarded as equi-
valent to the cathartic method, and, like this latter, involves the use of
hypnosis. Simmel’s results, however, are in complete agreement with the
psycho-analytic theory of the neuroses, his little book being therefore of
special interest to the psycho-analyst. |
With regard to the activity of the physician in charge of an analysis,
Freud (12) considers it an important fundamental rule that the treatment be
carried out as far as possible in a state of abstinence or deprivation; pre-
mature attempts at substitute-gratification must not be permitted. So far as
his relation to the analyst is concerned, the patient must be content to
remain with many of his desires unfulfilled. Freud considers it probable that
in the future less wealthy patients will be treated by psycho-analytic
methods in special clinics established for this purpose; though the pure gold
of analysis may have to be freely adulterated with the dross of suggestion,
hypnosis being also resorted to in this connection.
A strict analysis, and one calculated to be of service in the advance of
our theoretical knowledge, cannot however be regarded as correctly finished
(14) until the amnesia which conceals the early experiences of childhood
(from about the second to the fifth year of life) has been removed.
GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES
by
8 S. FERENCZI, Budapest.'
BIBLIOGRAPHY
res
. Abraham, K.; Untersuchungen aber die friheste pragenitale Entwick-
lungsstufe der Libido. Zest, B. IV, S. 71.
. Ibid.: Uber neurotische Exogamie. Jmago, B. Ill, S. 499.
3. Bleuler, E.: Kritik der Freudschen Theorien, Sitzungsbericht des
deutschen Vereines fir P-ychiatrie in Breslau. Mai 1913.
Siehe auch Afg. Z. f, Psydiatrie. B. 70.
4. Bod, J: Uber die Freudsche Lehre. Z. £ Sexualwissensdaft. Mai
1916. H. 2.
5. Chis, A. van der; Uber Halluzination und Psychoanalyse. Zeit, B. V,
S. 274, |
6. Diskussion tber die Freudsche Lehre in der Arztl. Ges, fiir Sex.-Wissen-
schaft zu Berlin. Z. f Sexualwissensdaft. 1916/17. S. 94 ff.
1. Eitingon, M.: Uber das Ubw. bei Jung und seine Wendung ins Ethische.
Zeit. B. II, S. 99. |
8. Engelen: Beitray sur Freudschen Psychoanalyse. Deutsde med?
sinishe Wodensdriff. 1913. Nr. 42,
‘ Translated by Sybil C. Porter.
GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES 295
9. lhid.: Suggestionsfaktoren bei der Freudschen Psychoanalyse.
Deutshe medizinisbe Wodensdrift. 1914. Nr. 40.
10. Eeden, F. van: Sigm. Fread. Frankf. Ztg. vom 29 Mai 1914.
11. Federn, P.: Lu t-Unlustprinzip und Realitatsprinzip. Zef#. B. II, S. 492.
12. Ferenczi, 5.2: Hysteric und Pathoneurosen. Nr. 2 der Int. Psychoanalyt.
Bibl. 1919,
13. Lbid.: Schwindelempfindungen am Schlusse der Analysenstunde.
Zeit. B. I, S. 272.
14. Ibid: Technische Schwierigkeiten einer Hystericanalyse. Ze/t.
B. V, S. 34.
15. Freud, S.: Vorlesungen zur Einfthrung in die Psychoanalyse. Teil III,
7 Alig. Neurosenlehre. 1917. -
16. Lbid.: Zar Geschichte der psychoanalytischen Bewegung. jahrb.
B,). V1.8. 207,
17, Ibid : Zur E nfthrung des Narzifimus. ,jahr6. B. VI. S. 1.
18. Lbid. Mitteilunz eines der psychoanalytischen Theorie wider-
sprechenden Fall:s von Paranoia. Zest, B. Ill, S. 321.
19. Lbid:: Triebe und Triebschicksale. Zest. B. III, S. 84.
20. Lhid.: Die Verdrangung. Zeys¢. B. Ill, >. 129.
21. Lbid-: Das UnbewuSte. Zesr. B. Il, S. 189 u. 257.
22. Ibid : Metapsychologische Erginzung zur Traumlehre. Zeft.
B. IV, S. 277.
23 Sbid: Trauer und Melancholi:. Zest, B. IV, S. 288.
24. lbid.: Einige Charakteitypen aus der psychuanalyt. Arbeit. Jago.
B. IV, S. 317.
25. Ibid. : Eine Schwierigkeit der Psychoanalyse. Jmago. B.V, S. 1.
26. Lbid.: Aus der Geschichte einer infantilen Neurose. (There works
also included in the “Sammlung kl. Schriften zur Neurosen-
Ichre”.) B IV. 1918.
27. Ibid. : “Kin Kind wird geschlagen.” Sexuelle Perversionen. Zeit.
B. V, 3. 151.
28. Fresdhl, R.: | Von Janet zur Individualpsychologie. ZA/ B.1V, S. 152.
29. Grodded, G.: Psychische Bedingtheit und psychoanalytische Behandlung
organischer Lviden.
30. Hitsdhmann, E.: Kreuds Neurosenlehre. 3, Aufl.
31. lbid.;: Fr: uds psychoanalytische B handlungsmethode. jahreshurse
ftir dratl, Fortbildung. 1913.
32. Hollitsher: | Freuds Lehre und Psychoanalyse. Jnt. Monatssdrift zur
Exforshung des Alkoholismus. XXII. 1912.
33. Jones, Ernest: Prof. Janet tiber dic Psycnoanalyse. Zest. B. IV, S. 34.
34. jung, C. G.: Der Inhalt der Psychose. 2. Aufl. 1914.
35. bid. : Versuch einer Darstellung de psychoanalytischen Theorie.
Jabrb. B. V, S. 307. |
36. Lbid.: Contribution & I’étude des types psychologiques. Ard. de
Psydé. Xill. 1913.
37. Kafka, V.: Freuds Lehre. Lotos. Naturw. Zsdr. B. LIX.
38. Kaplan, L.: Grundzige der Psychvanalyse. 1914.
39. Lbhid.: Psychoanalytische Probleme. 1916.
296
40,
41.
42,
43.
44,
45.
46.
47.
48.
49,
50.
51.
52.
53.
54,
55.
56.
57.
58.
59.
60.
COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
Thid.: Hypnotismus, Animismus, Psy°hoanalyse. 1917,
Tbid.: - Fortschritte der Psychoanalyse. Zarider Post vom 18. und
19. Dezember 1913.
Kinberg, O.: Kritische Reflexionen tiber die psychoanalytische Theorie.
Zscdr. fiir die ges. Neurol, und Psydiatrie. 37. 1917.
Koerber, H.: Die ¥reudsche Lehre und ihre Abzweigungen. Zsdr. fur
Sexualwissensdaft. 1916.
Ley, k-! Psychotherapeutische Streitfragen. (Ein Briefwechsel mit
Dr. C. G. Jung.) 1914.
Lombard, E.: Fyveud, La Psychoanalyse et la théorie i NG des
_ Névroses. Revue de Théologie et de Philos. Lausanne 1914.
Maad, F.: Die Wiener psychoanalyt. Schule. Hamh. Nadr. Juni 1914.
’ : Nr. 20.
Mesiers A. ¥.: Dr. C. G. Jungs Psychologie der unbewufSten Prozesse.
Zeit. B. IV, S. 302.
Marcinowski, J: Glossen zur Psychoanalyse. Zsdbr. fiir Psydotherapte.
VIA; 1914.
Ibid.: _Die erotischen Quellen der Minderwertigkeitsgeftthle. Zsar.
fiir Sexualwissenscdaft. 1V. 1917/1%.
Neuer, A.:° Wandiungen der Libido. Zsdér. fir Psydother. und med.
Psydol. 7. 1916/1.
Ortvay, R.: Eine biolog. Parallele zum Verdrangungsvorgang. Zeéf.
‘B. II, S2 26.
Putnam, J. J.: Ailgem. Gesichtspunkte zur SND Bewegung. Zeff.
BLES Sas
Regis, E.et Hésnard, A.: La Psychoanalyse des Sivvenusk et Psychoses. 1914.
Rosenstein, G.: Bleulers “‘autistisches Denken”. Z4/ B. IV, S. 70.
Scholz, L.: Die Freudsche Psychoanalyse. Die Guldenkammer. Bremen.
Mai 1914.
Sdhulz, J: Die Psychoanalyse. Theol.- Lit. Zettg. 17. 1, 1917.
Sdultz, Jj. H,.: Freuds Sexualpsychoanalyse. Krit. Einftihrung fir Gerichts-
a:zte, mit Vorwort von Irof. Binswanger. Berlin 1917.
Lausk, V.: Entwertung des Verdrangungsmotivs durch Rekompense.
Zeit, B. I, S. 230.
WeiBfeld, M.: Freuds Psychologie als eine Transformationstheorie. Jahrb.
sr i B. V, S. 621.
Ibid. : Die Umwandlungen des Affektlebens. Zest, B. II, S. 419.
The third part of the Introductory Lectures on Psycho-Analysis by Freud
under the title Allgemeine Neurosenlehre (15) is the most comprehensive
work on the Psycho-Analytical method of dealing with the neuroses that has
yet appeared. The paper on Psycho-Analysis and Psychiatry deals with the
apparent contradiction conveyed in the fact that while psychiatry refers the
aetiology of the psychoses almost entirely to inherited impulses and Psycho-
Analysis includes and lays stress on the importance of experience, and shows
GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES 297
that these views are not contradictory, as might appear, but are comple-.
mentary one to the other. And Freud predicts that in the near future a
scientific psychiatry will not be tenable without a knowledge of the unconscious
mental processes.
The significance of the symptom stands in relation to the experience of
the patient and must therefore be proved historically. The task of Psycho-
Analysis is therefore to find the past experiences in which the senseless idea
acquires meaning and the purposeless action an aim. This holds good with
“individual symptoms” but there are also “typical symptoms” in all cases
that are so similar that it is not possible to refer them back to a single per-
sonal experience; the personal historical meaning is in such cases insufficient.
For instance all sufferers from compulsion neuroses show the same
tendencies to repetition, to perform rhythmical actions, and to isolate
themselves. The same features appear in wearisome monotony in anxiety
neuroses: #. e. fear of enclosed places, open spaces and long streets. It is
remarkable that the analysis of the same hysterical symptom in different
cases uncovers such a complete dissimilarity of affective experience.
We are forced to consider that the basis of the typical symptom is only
to be explained in reference to an experience that is common to all men.
The next lecture describes the fixation as an attachment to a definite part
of the past and as incapacity to get released. This is a general and a very
important feature of every neurosis; the traumatic neuroses demonstrate this
nature of the fixation, sufferers from neuroses being unable to free them-
selves from the impulse active at the moment that the shock was experien-
ced; it is as though they had “not finished” with the traumatic situation
and were under an obligation to carry it to a conclusion. An experience is
traumatic when the mind receives suddenly so violent a stimulus that a dis-
charge or reaction is unsuccessful by the usual normal methods, the result
being that the affect is stored and persists. The traumatic moment can be
discovered in every neurosis by analysis. For a fixation to function neuroti-
cally, it is essential that the trauma causing the disease become “unconscious’’.
Merely to communicate the meaning of the symptom to the patient very
rarely results in a cure; the knowledge must be experienced by the patient
himself during the treatment together with the affect belonging to it. Un-
consciousness of the meaning of the neurotic symptom is safeguarded by
amnesia (hysteria) or by the destruction of the connecting links between the
retained memories (compulsion neurosis). The “whence” of the symptom
disappears in the first case and remains conscious in the latter; the ‘“where-
fore” of the symptom, its tendency and the purpose that it serves, remain
unconscious in both cases. The resistance of the patient to the cure is an
unexpected and improbable fact which nevertheless is revealed by Psycho-
Analysis. The whole purpose of analysis is to overcome this resistance. Since
Hypnosis has dropped out of the psycho-analytic technique, the dynamic
conception of the formation of the neurotic symptom has come to be accepted.
The resistance shows a fluctuation during the cure running parallel to the
fluctuation of the reaction to the emergence of new problems. This is .de-
monstrated in the most remarkable way in the vacillation of the intellectual
cooperation of the patient. We only get a clear concept of the theory of
298 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
repression when we proceed from the purely descriptive meaning of the
word “uncoriscious” to the systematic (topical) unconscious (ubw.). An idea
is “repressed” when the censor prohibits the progress from the system “un-
conscious” (ubw.), to the system “‘preconscious”’ (vbw.). The “censor” is identi-
cal with that power which as “resistance” attempted to hinder the progress
of the cure. The neurotic symptom is a substitute for something that has.
been hindered by repression. This something is in every single instance, as.
the analysis of numberless cases shows, sexual gratification; that is to say,
symptoms are disguised fulfilments of sexual impulses. All sufferers from
transference neuroses, hysteria and compulsion, are ill because gratification
of their sexual desires is denied them in reality. Part of the symptom acts.
as a defence against these sexual efforts, so that in hysteria the positive
wish-fulfilling character predominates and in compulsion neurosis the negative
and ascetic. Another part of the symptom is the compromise formation, the
issue of two opposing forces; this symptom occurs frequently in hysteria,.
in compulsion neurosis the two parts are separated and appear in the dua]
action of positive and negative.
The next lecture is on human sex life and deals with the sexual theory
of Freud, giving amongst other things, an explanation of the so-called per-
versions. Paranoia proceeds regularly from the defence against over-strong
homosexual desires. All perverse desires find expression in hysteria, which
endeavours to substitute other organs for the genitalia, these organs then be-
have as substitute genitalia, particularly the organs of nourishment and
excretion.
The compulsion neurotic symptoms have for their aim a sadistic gratifi-
cation, which is sometimes directed against the self (self-torture), or certain
activities are over-strongly sexualised which would normally belong to the
fore-pleasure (seeing, touching, peeping and particularly masturbation).
The sexual need, denied its normal path, is thrown upon abnormal ways.
The importance of perversions in neuroses is easy to explain when we learn
that they are only a return to infantile gratifications, the memory of which
is hidden from the majority by the veil of amnesia.
The following chapter deals with the concept of sexual organisation,
consolidated with that early infantile sexuality organ-erotism (auto-erotism)
namely the oral and the sadistic-anal pregenital organisation, then with the
processes of object finding and the (Edipus Complex of the child, this im-
portant source of the sense of guilt in the neurotic. Reference is made here
to “Totem and Taboo” where Freud has enlarged upon his theory that the
(dipus Complex is not only of importance as the nuclear complex of the
neurotic but that perhaps humanity as a whole drew its sense of guilt, that
ultimate source of religion and morality, from the (Edipus Complex.
The infantile love-object is the prototype of the valid love-object in
puberty when the release from the parents should take place. The neurotic
cannot effect this release: the son remains under the authority of the father
the whole of his life and cannot transfer his Libido from his mother to a
strange sex-object.
The lecture that follows opens up fresh points of view on development
and regression. There are two dangers that beset the path of the developing
GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES 299
Libido, obstruction and regression. The obstructed development is frequently
only the consequence of normal organic variations in individuals which retard
progress in the early stages, If a partial sexual impulse remains at an earlier
stage it is termed fixation in psycho-analytical nomenclature. The second
danger is that the parts that have developed further are easily turned back
to one of the earlier stages; this is the danger of regression. The stronger
the fixation the sooner will the function give way before outside difficulties
and regress to the stage of the fixation; strong fixations also denote an
enfeebled power of adaptability.
There are two kinds of regression, the reoccupation of the Libido with
the first (incestuous) love-object and the return of the entire sexual organi-
sation to an earlier stage. It is important not to confuse the concepts of
regression and repression, The concept of repression is purely psychologi-
cal (topical, dynamic), and independent of sexuality in principle. Regression,
on the contrary, is biological and descriptive, ”
Among the transference neuroses hysteria shows the repression of the
_ Libido to the primary incestuous love-object, but practically no regression to
an earlier sexual organisation; the part that repression plays in this mechanism
is all the more important. In other words the sexual organisation of the
hysteric continues undisturbed to the full development of the genital zone,
but this last function is repressed, which gives an appearance of an imper-
fectly developed genital organisation. In compulsion neuroses, on the con-
trary, the Libido regresses to the anal-sadistic organisation and at the same
time regression of the love-object takes place, therefore the anal-sadistic
desire is incestuous. It goes without saying that repression alone gives these
desires a neurotic character; regression of Libido without repression is per-
version without neurosis.
After this theoretical introduction and the definitions of concepts, Freud
proceeds to unravel the problem of the aetiology of the neuroses. He refers
first to the denial of gratification and remarks that this is not a cause of
disease in all men, and that many ways of escape stand open for the healthy
(substitute-gratification, sublimation). The amount of ungratified Libido that
a man can endure has its limits; the more incomplete the normal sexual or-
ganisation is, the stronger and more numerous will the Libido fixations be
on earlier organisations or love-objects, and all the sooner will the amount
of ungratified Libido show evidences of a pathological condition. The fixation
of the Libido represents the disposing internal factor and the denial of grati-
fication the accidental external factor in the aetiology of the neuroses. Asa
third, quantitatively indefinite factor, Freud cites the adhesive quality of the
Libido, £ ¢. the difficulty with which a method of gratification is given up
or exchanged for another; this factor is however not specifically neurotic, it
plays a large part in normality and particularly in perversions.
A further complication of the problem arises from the psychical conflict
of opposing wish-impulses; without such a conflict there would be no neu-
rosis. This conflict may, under certain circumstances, result in the formation
of symptoms, which are nothing else but discredited forms of gratification
returned by indirect paths in disguised forms. The psychical conflict repre-
sents the inner - “denial” and only when it is associated with an outer
300 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
“refusal” does the latter become pathogenic. Freud thinks it probable that in
the earlier days of man’s development the inner “denial” sprang originally
from outer actual impediments. The powers that occasion these refusals are
the non-sexual instinctive tendencies, which Freud calls collectively the
Ego-impulses, the pathogenic conflict is waged between these and the sexual
impulses. :
Particular emphasis is laid here on the significance that Psycho-Analysis
attaches to the non-sexual tendencies in the aetiology of the neuroses,
although it must be allowed that Psycho-Analysis has not been able to
investigate the stages of development of the Ego so narrowly as has been
done with those of Libido. The little we know of it we owe to research into
the mechanism of the so-called narcissistic neuroses (paranoia, schizo-
phrenia) except for an attempt at the reconstruction of the Ego development,
which is, however, purely theoretical. Normally there exists a certain parallelism
between the phases of development of the Ego and the Libido; this corre-
spondence could be destroyed by a pathogenic force when the Ego would
react with repression and fixation upon the non-corresponding organisation or
Libido stage. The third factor of the aetiology of the neuroses, 7. e. the
tendency to conflict, is as dependent upon the Ego as upon the Libido.
The complete formula of the aetiology runs, therefore, as follows: the
most general condition of development of neuroses is the denial which
witholds the aim and love object from the Libido; the fixation collects the
detached Libido into certain primitive levels; the conflict bias of the Ego
development tends to draw away from these archaic tendencies so that they
can only appear in disguised forms as symptoms. One can guess the “ways
of symptom formation”. Because of outer and inner denial the Libido meets
with regression, the Ego, striving against this regression, takes away every
possibility of gratification, and the Libido flows back to the fixation levels
of earlier happier times. The memory traces of these primitive fixated
methods of gratification belong to the unconscious system and are governed by
its psychical processes (displacement, condensation): nevertheless, the oppo-
sition raised by the Ego against the expression of Libido activities continues
in the unconscious as “counter-charge” and forces it to choose such ex-
pression as is compatible with the aims of the Libido and the Ego-ideal.
“The symptom. appears as a many-sided disguised issue of unconscious
libidinous wish-fulfilment; an ingeniously selected double meaning, with two
widely dissimilar interpretations.” The censorship of wish-fulfilment is much
more powerful in the symptom than in the dream.
The significance of childhood is twofold: on the one side we have the
innate tendencies of inherited instincts and on the other the first.experiences
at the most impressionable age.
The factors involved are sexual constitution and infantile experience,
which form, one with the other, a “complementary whole”. As, however, the
infantile experiences act regressively in neuroses one might come to the
conclusion that at the time they held no real meaning. This is incorrect.
The careful study of childhood neuroses, “the infantile neuroses”, shows
these experiences. in full activity. Such infantile neuroses are absent in the
minority of adult neurotics, they appear usually in the form of anxiety-hysteria
GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES 301
and either gradually merge into the “greater neurosis” or are separated
from it by a period of mental: health.
Symptoms are, as stated above, substitute gratifications, “they recall in
some manner early infantile forms of gratification disguised by the censor
during previous conflict tuned as a rule to the sensibility of the malady and
mingled with elements from the inducing cause of the illness.” They lose sight
of the object and thereby get out of touch with reality, turning back at
the same time to a form of enlarged auto-erotism, retreating to an earlier
phylogenetic stage, and adapting themselves to the alteration of their own
bodies in place of the alterations of the outside world, finally bringing the
aims of the Libido under the sway of the displacement and condensation
processes of the unconscious.
The infantile sexual experiences produced by patients under analysis are
in great part phantasy; reality and phantasy are of equal value according
to the neurotic standard, the psychic reality only being of worth. Some of
these phantasies appear with surprising frequency, such as phantasies of witnessing
parental coitus, threats of castration, or of seduction. In many cases the reality
of these remembrances can, with every probability, be discredited, which fact
is immaterial to the pathogenic significance of the phantasies. These primitive
phantasies are phylogenetic, the. imaginative child fills up the gaps of indi-
vidual truth with prehistoric. truth; in the primitive history of mankind these
experiences (castration, witnessing coitus, and seduction) were realities.
Unconscious phantasies and day-dreams are the source of the neurotic
symptom as well as of the night dream. The Libido only needs to draw back
the phantasy in order to find the path to the repressed fixations. The Ego is
much more tolerant in phantasy than in reality and endures otherwise forbidden
sexual qualities if they do not take the upper hand quantitatively.
The over-charging of the phantasy world by the quantity of Libido is
termed “introversion” and is the threshold of symptom formation. A purely
dynamic (qualitative) conception of the mental processes during symptom-
formation is insufficient to complete the picture; it needs the introduction
of the quantity of the energy, # e. the economic point of view,
Regarded from the economic standpoint neurotic symptom formation is
a failure, mental effort and incentive is so overpowered that the accumulated
“pain” (Z/n/ust) is piled up. 7 :
The difference between the neurotic and the artist is as follows: the artist
is an invert but not so far as to be neurotic. He possesses the puzzling
capability of moulding material so that it becomes a representation of his
phantasy; thus he finds a way back to reality and to some extent at least
he is saved from neurosis. :
The lecture on “General Nervousness” is in opposition to the theory
of Adler who holds that “nervous character” is the origin and not the result
of neurosis. The behaviour of the nervous led Adler to overlook the great
significance of the Libido and he judged of the circumstances as they appeared
to the Ego of the patient. As the Ego is the power that represses sexuality
and denies the unconscious its gratification, the issue on those points Is
a negative one. It is as though one installed the victorious faction * judge
in a dispute. As a matter of fact we can learn nothing of the “nervous
302 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
character" from the study of the symptom formation of the Ego, but from
the study of the “narcissistic” neuroses. However, the observation of cases
of traumatic neuroses shows us a self-seeking Ego-motive striving after pro-
tection and gain; this motive does not induce the malady but acquiesces in it
and accepts it when it has come to pass. Every non-traumatic neurotic
symptom is also bound up with the Ego because it has an aspect which
affords satisfaction to the repressed Ego instincts; furthermore, every symptom
formation is only too convenient to egotism in that it is a pain-sparing
process. These are examples of the “inner gain” for the Ego obtained from
the neuroses. There are also cases in which the “flight into sickness’ means
the mildest form of relieving the conflict, so that even the physician shrinks
from interference. However, in most cases the advantages of the so-called
exterior gain from sickness are much too small when one compares them
with the suffering entailed and the inherent disadvantages. At any rate
a neurosis of long standing acquires a secondary functioning that strengthens
its stability and presents stronger resistances to its cure.
In the following exposition we find a short summary of all that Freud has
added to the elucidation of the actual-neuroses (neurasthenia, anxiety-neurosis,
hypochondria). These are described as being the direct somatic results of
sexual disturbances and the analogy of poisoning is suggested. It is repeatedly
stated that the “system of Psycho-Analysis is in reality a superstructure that
should always be traced back to its organic basis”. The symptom of actual-
neurosis is often the nucleus and the first stage of psycho-neurotic symptoms.
The foundation of anxiety-hysteria is usually anxiety-neurosis, that of con-
version-hysteria is neurasthenia, and that of paraphrenia is hypochondria.
The lecture on “Anxiety” presents a whole series of highly important
explanations. Psycho-Analysis differentiates between real anxiety, which is
both a rational reaction to an exterior danger and an expression of the
instinct of self-preservation (flight-reflex), and neurotic anxiety that appears
either with no motive or an insufficient one. On further consideration the
judgement on the suitability of real anxiety must be revised. Only the motor
reaction, the flight from danger, is rational; the condition of anxiety itself
is inappropriate, particularly when it acts as an inhibition. The condition of
anxiety is only appropriate so long as it confines itself to a single action,
a signal to “be prepared”; each demonstration of anxiety is, eo spso,
inappropriate. This inappropriate affect is, according to Freud’s view, 2
repetition of a significant traumatic experience phylogenetically fixed from
infantile days. The birth act combines this group of unpleasurable sensations,
feelings of being carried away and other physical sensations that form an
effectual prototype for being in peril of one’s life, and is repeated as
a condition of anxiety. (In connection with this Freud refers to the signi-
ficant analogy between affect and conversion hysteria. The hysterical attack
is newly formed individual affect, the normal affective expression of a general
hysteria, which has become an inheritance; both depend upon reminiscence.)
Neurotic anxiety takes three forms: 1. General nervous anxiety (anxious
expectancy, anxiety-neurosis); 2, Phobia; 3. An attack of anxiety.
The anxious expectancy is the result of frustrated sexual excitement or
a hindered sexual satisfaction and appears with the heaping up of Libido,
+
GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES 303
We learn by the analysis of hysterics that affect, hindered in its normal
reaction, is converted into anxiety. “Anxiety is the common currency against
which all emotional affect is, or can be, exchanged when the ideational
content which belongs to it has been interdicted by repression.” The symptoms
of obsessional neuroses, as well as of the hysterical phobias, are instrumental
in avoiding an anxiety condition that would otherwise be unavoidable. All
neurotic anxiety symbolises physiological sexual emotion abnormally con-
verted (anxiety-neurosis) or the repression of psycho-sexual emotion (anxiety-
hysteria). It is very difficult to discover the relations between actual and
neurot.c anxiety. The idea is forcibly presented to us that in neurotic
anxiety the ego attempts to flee from its Libido in a manner similar to the
effort of actual anxiety to flee from external danger. While according to
Adler’s theory of “inferiority” a child is nervous because it brings with it
at birth an enhanced degree of helpless anxiety before external danger, the
lib:do theory of anxiety holds that these children have an innate tendency
to libidinous demands to an enhanced degree or in consequence of being
over-indulged possess Libido that is unrealisable and becomes converted into
anxiety. In the case of phobias a very small external danger will represent
demands of the Libido. In the development of anxiety it is necessary in
every case that the demands of the Libido be repressed (unconscious) or
unsatisfied (free-floating); Libido is never converted into anxiety so long as
its claims remain in the conscious mind.
“The Libido Theory of ‘Narcissism’ stands in opposition to that of Jung
who generalises the term Libido and confounds the concept with that of energy.
Freud has regard to the biological duality of the essence of life and draws
a strict dividing line between the ego-instincts and sexual instincts (Libido).
The researches of Freud and Abraham on the psychology of Dementia
Praecox and later the research of Freud on Paranoia, have made it possible
to formulate an Ego psychology psycho-analytically, while the transference
neuroses only allow of the opportunity to analyse the Libido psychology.
It is now accepted that the later object-love has always a threshold stage,
the narcissistic, when all Libido (bodily and mental) belongs to the Ego,
and where the Ego is itself the object. In physical sickness and in sleep
(which is only a nightly reproduction of the intra-uterine state) this narcissistic
stage recurs. On falling in love, on the contrary, nearly all the transferable
Libido is directed on the object so that the Ego is practically emptied of Libido.
The Ego can be free of libidinous chargé without losing its function of
usefulness. The Ego projects its (narcissistic) Libido in order that it may
not fall sick from storing it unduly. The process of withdrawing the Libido
from the object into the Ego and barring the way of its return, as in
hypochondria and paraphrenia, is similar to the process of repression;
the fixations of which the narcissistic neuroses make use by this method of
“repression” aré much earlier stages of development than in hysteria or
obsessional neurosis. The most obvious symptoms of Dementia Praecox
symbolise the endeavour to get back to the object /. ¢. the representation
of the object. The only thing they succeed in doing is to arrive at the
unconscious “word” while the unconscious “thing” that belongs to it
remains beyond their reach. With the narcissistic neuroses the resistance
20
304 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
against the healing tendencies are irresistible, because transference is either
lacking or is too dangerous.
In spite of this the symptoms can be unravelled on the basis of psycho-
analytical experience gained from the transference neuroses.
A short statement of the psycho-analytical theory of paranoia and
melancholia closes the clinical section of this lecture which concludes with
the assertion that all neurotic maladies, from the simplest actual neurosis
to the most severe psychic estrangement of the individual, can be traced back
to a heaping up of the libidinous factor of mental life.
The lecture on “Transference” commences with some severe criticism
on “wild psycho-analysts” who erroneously identify the doctrine of “free
living’’ and Psycho-Analysis. They forget that the pathological conflict of the
neurotic takes place between two impulses that are not localised on the
same (psychic) levels; a comparison between them and any connection by
the aid of reason is not possible without previously bringing the repressed
thoughts to consciousness; a decision on the conduct of life of a neurotic can
never precede a course of psycho-analysis but follows after it and comes
about during. the analysis by itself without any particular advice from the
doctor. The patient can then decide upon a sublimation of the impulse or
upon a possible substitute gratification.
Everyone who would understand or practice Psycho-Analysis should study
these lectures of Freud’s with the most careful attention.
Another work of Freud’s entitled “The History of the Psycho-Analytical
Movement” (16) is so enlightening that some of the points must be quoted.
The, question of what is Psycho-Analysis and what has no right to the name
receives here a definite reply that cannot be misunderstood. “Every branch
of research which acknowledges the two facts of transference and resistance
and takes them as a nucleus of their work is entitled to the name of Psycho-
Analysis". Regarded from this standpoint a judgement can be formed on the
two dissentient movements that have developed within the ranks of Psycho-
Analysis.
While Psycho-Analysis only intends to stand as an augmentation and
supplement to knowledge gained by others, Alfred Adler lays claim to a
complete theory of human mental life; he endeavours to explain neuroses
and the character and behaviour of man under the same heading. His theory
was a finished system from the first, whereas Psycho-Analysis has always
explicitly disclaimed such finality for itself. Adler's theory consists of three
elements of unequal value: 1. Valuable additions on the psychology of the
Ego, 2. Translation of analytical facts into a new jargon. 3. Misrepresentation
and perversion of the true meaning of these facts.
The good material deals with the egoistical adjunct to the libidinous
instinctive impulses as they are valued by Psycho-Analysis. While, however,
Psycho-Analysis has always acknowledged in principle the actuality and the
significance of egoistical impulses and has taken them into individual account
GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES 305
whenever possible, Adler denies whenever he can all connection between
the Libido and the Ego-impulses, and this to such an extent that he finally
maintains that the desire to be superior is the strongest incentive to the
sex act, and states that the psycho-analyst is so easily deceived as to be
taken in by the deliriums of neurotics, believing their sexual phantasies to be
the real thing. The Adler theory, founded entirely on the impulse of aggres-
sion, leaves no room for love. The stimulus of the personal gain from sick-
ness that has been given its proper place in Psycho-Analysis plays the chief
part in Adler's teaching on the neuroses. ;
Another part of his teaching is nothing else but a kind of “secondary
elaboration” of pure psycho-analytical doctrines. Instead of the phrase
“protective measures” he uses “security”; instead of “phantasy”, “fiction”.
The “masculine protest” of Adler is nothing else but repression released
from psychological mechanism and considered in sexual terms, in remarkable
opposition to the previous assertions of asexuality. At the same time the
passive and feminine impulsive activities, which certainly cannot be
explained by the aggressive instinct, are disregarded, and the biological, social
and psychological senses of the masculine are confounded. Then follows mis-
representation and perversion of psycho-analytical facts conveyed in conclusions
which have no therapeutic value. In the light of Adler’s concept, neurosis is
only a side-issue of the general disease of organ inferiority, while daily
observation teaches us that malformations may be accompanied by complete
mental health. The unconscious plays an unimportant part with Adler. He
does not refer to the system and cites the “nervous temperament” as 2
psychological peculiarity. The infantile impulses which are such an important
part of psycho-analytical doctrine appear as the inferior feeling of the child.
The mechanism of the symptom and phenomena, the basis of the many-
sidedness of the symptom, receive no attention whatsoever. From all this
it is clear that this form of teaching has nothing to do with Psycho-Analysis.
In consequence the title Psycho-Analysis has been dropped and that of
“Individual Psychology” adopted. Although radically false, the Adler doctrine
is consequent, coherent and based upon a theory of instinct. Jung’s modi-
fication, on the contrary, has confounded the connection of the phenomena and
the instinctive life. Jung and his followers join issue with Psycho-Analysis
on a fresh count. They state that in individuals the materials of sexual
concepts can be changed to represent the highest religious and ethical
interests; in other words, they describe special cases of sublimation. They
do not say, however, that sexual impulses can be changed into asexual
ones, but that these complexes contain from the start something “higher”
and have an anagogic meaning; this links on easily to abstract thought-
processes which are more allied to ethics and religious mysticism than to
natural science. Even the (dipus complex is not real but only to be con-
sidered “symbolically”. The Mother. stands for the “unattainable” which has
to be renounced in the interests of the progress of civilisation; the Father,
who is murdered in the myth, is the “internal father” from whom one must
free oneself in order to gain independence. The conflict between the Ego
and the Libido takes place according to Jung between the “Life Task” and
“Psychic Inertia”. Individual inquiry is repressed by Jung’s technique: it
206
306 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
prescribes that as little time as possible be devoted to the past and that
the chief stress be laid upon the actual conflict. This turning away from the
past is an admission by Jung and his followers that the sexual represen-
tations in dreams and in neuroses are nothing but archaic methods of expression
of higher thought and that they no longer carry libidinous elements.
Jung’s modification appears as such a misrepresentation of Freudian
doctrines that in bearing the title of Psycho-Analysis it is guilty of a
kind of mimicry. The fact that Adler and Jung were for so long ardent
followers of Freud and have since seceded from him, finds its explanation
in analogous phenomena in analysis. Experience shows that the total rejec-
tion of analytical knowledge does not proceed only from the surface but
also from every deeper level in which a particularly strong resistance is
found.
A communication of clinical psychiatry (18) gives the important fact that
the development of the Libido can proceed in a normal direction even from
the basis of a pathological fixation. A female paranoiac whose feelings have
been aroused by her own sex, and whose hallucinatory ideas were first in
connection with female persons, can sek and find the way to the male with
that portion of Libido which has kept sane, namely the developed unfixated
portion, so that the hallucinatory ideas would be projected on to a man.
Also the so-called neurasthenic can be kept from the incestuous love-object
by his unconscious ties, and take a strange woman as love-object, his sexual
activities being confin.d to the phantasy. He can carry out his desires on
the basis of phantasy and substitute a strange object for the mother or
sister. The conflict between the creative instincts does not cease after the
symptom that forms a compromise has been established, but continues in
connection with. the symptom itself. The progressive tendency tries to free
the individual from the symptom, the regressive to hold fast to it. This
latter tendency which Jung designates simply as “Psychic Inertia” is nothing
short of what Psycho-Analysis calls a fixation: that is, the expression of
instinctive. practices that have been followed in earlier years and which are
very hard to get free from, together with impressions and the objects con-
tained in them which have brought the further dev.lopment of this part of
the instinct to a standstill.
The most important article in Freud’s series on Meta-Psychology is that
on “Repression” (20). We learn from it that this process consists of two
acts chronologically separated. The first condition of the repressive process
is that at some time a primal repression must have occurred, that is to say,
the ideational representation of an instinct must have denied the acceptance
into consciousness. This results in a fixation. The second phase is repression.
Properly speaking, it is an after-repression that concerns the issue of a
GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES 307
repressed idea that has escaped into consciousness or such thought-traces
so closely associated to it that they incur the same fate with which the
primally repressed idea has met. It concerns, therefore, not only a thrusting out
from consciousness but also the attractive force of the primal repression, The
repressive process only nullifies the consciousness of the ideas, they continue
their organising qualities and form fresh associations, If the associations are
sufficiently distant from the repressed idea th: y can enter consciousness in
spite of their connection. During psycho-analysis these connected ideas are
produced by free association. Neurotic symptoms are also to be understood
as issuing from the same repressed ideas but in transformed and distant guise.
The re-ressed material heaps up a continual pressure towards consciousness
which must be balanced by an equal pressure in the opposite direction,
entailing an expenditure of energy the release of which constitutes an
economic saving. Repression concerns the representation of an instinct, and
the adherent affect will either be completely repressed or changed into
anxiety. In the latter event the repression has failed. The neurotic symptom
is not caused by repression but by the return of the repressed which thwarts
the motive of the repression ¢ ¢,’the avoidance of “pain”. In anxiety-
hysteria (Animal Phobia, for instance) the substitute formation occurs on the
part of the displacement (Father-Animal), but the “pain” is first guarded
against by another process of repression, an avoidance (Phobia). In conversion-
hysteria the ideal content o! the instinct representation is completely hidden
from consciousness, the symptom consists of a purely somatic innervation,
an over-strung emotion or inhibition which has drawn the entire “charge”
on to itself by condensation. This process of repression puts an end to its
activity; in hysteria there is no second phase as in phobia. In compulsion-
neurosis the repression works as always by the withdrawal of the Libido belong-
ing to the sadistic-anal-erotic impulses; the substitute consists of a reaction-
formation, the increase of conscientiousness, that is the displacement of
interest on to the opposite of what had been the aim of the Libido. This
repression, however, also fails and symptoms form, social anxiety, scruples
and self-reproach, in which the repressed affect returns; the rejected idea
also returns in a displacement-substitute (often as a displacement on to a
diminutive), Finally there is the reaction of flight by taboo and prohibition
as in hysterical phobia which continues in a never-ending and purposeless
cycle. The one thing that every activity of repression has in common is the
warding off ot ideas from consciousness which prevents the motor-activity
of the impulses and the possibility of their coming into action.
Freud’s treatise on the Unconscious (21) deals with the repressive pro-
cesses from the topical, dynamic, and economic aspects. The question when
and how affect can become unconscious is answered by Freud that this is
only possible by inhibiting its discharge. All the forces at the command of
repression are exhausted in causing an idea to become unconscious and in
inhibiting the discharge of the affect connected with it. By the act of
repression the affect is severed trom the idea and both go their several
ways independently; thus stands the definition of repression, Actually the
affect never comes to expression until it can break through to a fresh sub-
stitute in the conscious system. For repression to take effect it is necessary
308 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
that a counter-charge is exercised by the pre-conscious which protects this
system against pressure from the unconscious idea. The primal repression is
nothing but counter-charge, the actual repression comes from the with-
drawal of the pre-conscious charge.
In anxiety-hysteria an unconscious love-impulse strives to enter the fore-
conscious; the pre-conscious charge draws back as though in flight before
it; whereupon the Libido remaining in the unconscious is converted into
anxiety. On the repetition of the anxiety development the fleeing charge
links on to the displacement substitute which takes up the position of
counter-charge. Hereafter the anxiety proceeds from the substitute idea, and
develops all the stronger from that point. The further task of stemming the
anxiety development falls to an outpost formed from the associated ideas of
the substitute idea: this is charged with a peculiar intensity and possesses
a high degree of sensitivity against excitation: the excitation of the most
distant part of this outpost acts as an anxiety signal that serves to stem the
pressure of the charge towards the substitute idea. In this way the idea is
practically isélated from other, unconscious ideational contents. The more
strongly the impulse presses from the unconscious, the larger must be the
circle of anxiety signal ideas round about the substitute idea to bar the way
to the phobia taboo. The substitute idea acts as counter-charge in opposition
to the (repressed) unconscious idea, the phobia outpost as counter-charge to
the substitute idea. This mechanism of defence projects the inner danger in-
stinct outwards, in that the menace is changed into an external one.
In conversion-hysteria the entire impulse-charge is condensed from the
unconscious into a somatic symptom that at the same time acts as counter-
charge to the defence or punishment efforts of the conscious system. In
compulsion neuroses the counter-charge appears most significantly in the
foreground of the reaction formation.
Repression acts most successfully in hysteria, perhaps because the de-
fence system also provides a path of discharge, while in anxiety-hysteria and
compulsion neuroses the defence only consists of counter-charge which pro-
vides but small opportunity for discharge, an inferior protection against the
anxiety development.
The abstraction of the conscious charge, the attempt at flight by the
Ego, succeeds much better in the so-called narcissistic neuroses (dementia-
praecox, paranoia) than with the transference neuroses, as the instinct-charge
is completely withdrawn from the spots that represent the unconscious
object-idea.
In the “ ‘Metapsychological’ Supplement to the Theory of Dreams” (22)
Freud gives fresh information on that important problem, the genesis of
hallucination. From the general part of his “Interpretation of Dreams’’ we
learnt that when psychical excitation is inhibited by an interruption from that
pursuing a normal course from the unconscious to the conscious, and affect
is in consequence dammed up so that regression takes place, it can enter
perception as counter-charge of the raw material of unconscious memory
GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES 309
traces; this would be hallucination. As there are, however, other methods of
re-experiencing these memory-traces (as for instance recollection) Freud was
obliged to take into consideration that for hallucination to come a specific
interruption was necessary in the capacity for reality tests. The organ by
which the test can be applied is in the conscious (perceptual) system; it
holds the function of giving information as to whether a psychical stimulus
comes from within (¢. e. from the psychical memory system) or from without
(from perception). Our whole relationship with the outside world depends
upon this capacity. Hallucination therefore consists of a charge from the
conscious system (perception) not as normally from the outside world but
from the inside, in that it escapes the reality test by regression. For a
reality test the conscious system must arrange for a motor innervation from
which a signal will be received as to whether the stimulus can be actively
avoided (outside stimulus) or not (inside stimulus). In hallucinatory wish-
psychoses the Ego breaks off all connection with painful reality; thereby
a path is opened up for the wish-phantasy away from any reality test. In
hallucinatory psychosis, in Dementia-Praecox, the Ego of the patient is so
split up that no reality test can hinder the hallucinations, Hallucination in the
latter psychosis is a secondary symptom and usually appears later when the
Libido endeavours to reach the memory-traces of the object by means of
counter-charge. The verbigeration of Schizophrenia (charge of the residue
of word-memories) and the projection symptoms of paranoia (persecutory
delusions) are similar “restitution efforts” in the service of the tendency to
dissociation. Even in the latter case it is a question of an interruption of
the reality test: the paranoiac strives to project on to the outer world the
internal stimulus that has become intolerable to him. Finally a glance is
thrown at the significance that the subject of the “organ of repression” has
for our view into the mechanism of psychical disturbances. In the dream the
withdrawal of the charge (Libido) touches all systems equally, in the tran-
ference neuroses the pre-conscious charge is withdrawn, in Schizophrenia
that of the unconscious, in Amentia that of consciousness.
Freud's article on “Depression and Melancholia” (23) brings to a close
the series of his metapsychological essays. We learn that the disposition to
melancholia predominates in the narcissistic type of love-object, and that the
refusal of food that is a characteristic of the complaint can be traced back
to a regression to the oral stage of the Libido. The self-reproaches of the
melancholic are in reality reproaches against persons with whom the patient
has identified himself. The (undoubtedly) pleasurable self-torture in melan-
cholia is a gratification of sadistic and hate impulses against an object, but
these by inversion get directed against the person of the patient.
This sadism furnishes us with an answer to that most difficult psycho-
pathological riddle, the suicidal tendency. We have long known that suicidal
impulses are reversed murder impulses. The analyses of melancholia teach
us that the Ego only desires to kill itself when it takes itself as object by
reason of the return of the object-charge. The Ego is completely overcome
by the object in suicide and in falling in love, though in quite different ways.
The Ego is completely emptied of Libido by the process and the perception of
the self in this condition explains the delusions of poverty of the melancholic.
310 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
The closing chapters discuss the psycho-analysis of Cyklothymia and Mania
in particular, and should be read in the original.
Freud's “One of the Difficulties of Psycho-Analysis” (25) puts befure us
a psychological explanation of the opposition that meets psycho-analytical
doctrine on every side (See Vol. I, p. 17 of this Journal.).
The following notes have been gathered from Freud’s work “The History
of an Infantile Neurosis’ (26).
The analyses of children’s neuroses command a special theoretical in-
terest. They furnish proof of the uselessness of superficial interpretation of
analytical material. The analysis of children shows “in flagrante’’ the enor-
mous part that libidinous impulses play in the formation of neuroses, and
demonstrates the absence of the aims of civilisation of which the child knows
nothing and which therefore can have no significance for him. The profound
analysis of the case detailed in this paper proves that a child at the tender
age of one and a half years is actually in a condition to receive an impression
of such a complicated process as the observation of parental c: itus, tv preserve
the impression faithfully in the unconscious, and to reproduce the material (as
in this case) in the fourth year, and it also proves that Psycho-Analysis is a
procedure by means of which it is possible to bring the details of such a
scene to consciousness in a consecutive and convincing manner decades after
the actual occurrence. An analysis such as the preceding one is an eloquent
argument against undervaluing the impressions of infancy. The case is fresh
proof how necessary it is to uncover all unconscious thought processes in
the course of an analysis without any regard as to whether they are phanta-
sies or memories of actual experiences.
A “curtailed procedure” would have missed the necessary connecting
links and in consequence the correct understanding of the case. Scenes from
such early days are not as a rule reproduced as memories but must be re-
constructed step by step from associations. The opposers of Pschyo-Analysis
maintain that these reconstructions are formed by the analyst and forced
upon the patient. No decisions can be arrived at on this point so long as
these opponents refuse to form these reconstructions themselves strictly after
Freud’s methods. Jung places the actual conflict in the foreground at the
expense of the infantile, Freud maintains on the contrary that the influences
from childhood make themselves felt in the very earliest stages in neuroses
in that they determine whether and at what point the individual fails to face
the real problems of life.
The fact that a child can develop a neurotic condition in the fourth or
fifth year is a proof that infantile experiences are able alone to produce a
neurosis and one finds the cause rests with primitive instincts and not with
higher ideals, :
_ The “primitive scenes” reconstructed in analysis (observation of parental
coitus, castration threats, seduction) may be either actual experiences or
phylogenetic inheritance. The child reaches after phylogenetic experience.
where his individual experience fails; it is, however, wrong to attempt a
phylogenetic explanation before one has exhausted the ontogenetic material
GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES 311
(Jung has fallen into this error), The inherited phylogenetic systems, like
the philosophical “categories”, provide for the disposal of life impressions.
Freud advances the theory that they are “precipitates‘’ of the history of
human Civilisation. The system can, however, rise superior to individual ex-
perience and take its place. An instinctive knowledge, a presage of
approaching experience corresponding to animal instinct, operates in reaction
to the earliest sexual impressions. This instinctive knowledge would be the
nucleus of the unconscious, a primitive mental activity that would be over-
shadowed by human reasoning powers but retaining the power to draw higher
mental processes down to its own level. Repression would be the return to
this instinctive level and man pays for his progress with the liability to neu-
rosis, giving evidence of the existence of the earlier stage by the very possi-
bility of it. The significance of the early dreams of childhood lies in the
fact that they furnish material for the unconscious that protects it from being
absorbed by the later developments.
* * *
Freud’s work “A Child is being Beaten” (27) gives his views on the origin
of sexual perversions. After a searching enquiry into the rise of masochistic
perversion from the (Edipus complex, he takes the opportunity to restate
that the motive of repression must not be sexualised as Adler asserts in his
“Masculine Protest”’.
“The nucleus of the unconscious mind is formed by the archaic inheri-
tance of man and whatever is unserviceable to the furtherance of later phases
of development or is incompatible with, and would injuriously hinder, pro-
gress falls under the processes of repression.
“This selection is more successful in one group of impulses than with
others. It is in the power of the latter, the sexual impulses, by virtue of
particular conditions to frustrate the intentions of the repression and to en-
force its subjugation by disturbing substitute-formations. Therefore infantile
sexuality underlying repression is the chief impulsive force of symptom-
formation and the essential part of its content is the (dipus complex,
the nuclear complex of neuroses.”
Freud maintains that the sexual aberrations of childhood, as well as
those of adult life, branch off from the masculine complex.
In these sentences we find the most important of Freud’s discoveries of
the last few years.
‘Abraham's enquiry into the earliest pregenital stages of the develop-
ment of the Libido (1) casts a cursory glance at the Freudian pregenital he
ganisation and then concentrates upon the study of the cannibalistic im-
pulses in Schizophrenia. In this illness the oral zone is of greater significance
than any other erotogenic zone. The sexual function and the taking of
nourishment are closely associated in the act of sucking, the desire for in-
corporation stands in conjunction with the sex-object. Then follows a general
312 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
characterisation of similar appetites in normal persons and in neurotics;
attacks of ravenous appetite are often the expression of libidinous impulses.
In many of these cases a persistent desire to suck obtains a strong influence
in adult life, it reacts upon the behaviour and interferes with the other
functions of the oral zone (eating and speaking). All neurotics suffer from
ill-humour when they have to renounce an accustomed gratification of the
oral zone and on the other hand their ill-humour is dispelled by a pleasurable
oral gratification. Ill-humoured or excited neurotics are favourably influenced
by the mere swallowing of some neutral medicine. The suggestive action of
a medicine bottle lies in the fact that the unconscious returns in the act to
the earliest source of gratification. This is also the explanation why neu-
rotics are so happily occupied with their diet and the art of taking food.
The regression to the earliest stage of sexual organisation shows us the
meaning of the refusal to eat and the fear of starvation of so many mental
patients. Traces of this regression are also apparent in normal persons in
declining years. In melancholia an unconscious sadistic wish is dominant in
annihilating the love-object by devouring it. The severe self-reproach of the
melancholic is in part due to this impulse. The so-called “lycanthropic” de-
lusions which have for content the devouring of human beings, are yet
clearer examples.
The same impulses are represented in the insane in a negative
form, #. ¢, the refusal of all food, The fear of starvation is the result of re-
pression when the cannibalistic desire is converted into fear. Accounts of
“dismemberment” in the sagas and the mythological accounts of the god
who devoured his own children are psychological folk-lore parallels to the
cannibalistic period of the individual to which, as we see, the neurotic so
easily reverts.
Abraham's article on “Neurotic Exogamy” (2) deals with the fact that
many neurotics, obeying an inner urge, incline towards persons of another
race. This inner urge has the same effect on these individuals as the open
law of primitive people. The ethnological law and the neuro-psychological
fact have a common basis in the dread of incest.
V. Tausk (a pupil of Freud whose valuable work has been cut short by
an unfortunately premature death) draws our attention to the economy of the
Psychical Processes (58). The overcoming of resistance in the course of
a psycho-analytical cure is due to a relative depreciation in the value of the
motive. The gain in psychical adaptability is the reward for overcoming
resistance. The “pain” which would make for resistance becomes a means of
profit to pleasure. The capacity of ideas for entering consciousness is decided
according to their quality for pleasure or “pain” consequent upon the
psychical development of the individual. According to Tausk a series of
GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES 313
pleasurable thoughts springs up immediately before the reproduction of an
erotogenic conception which recompences the subject for the depreciation
of the consciousness of self. This recompense reduces the value of the re- |
pression motive.
*
A. van der Chijs’ work on “Hallucination and Psycho-Analysis” (5) de-
scribes a case of paraphrenic hallucination that was considerably benefitted
by a course of analysis, corroborating Freud’s views on the subject, and it
presents a theory on the modern expressionistic school of art and the psycho-
analytical doctrine of neurosis and psychosis. These phenomena in the
world of art, the increasing comprehension of the public, and the displace-
ment of the old moral ideas (“not unconnected with the discoveries and
teaching of Freud’) are to a certain extent pathological excess and partly
perhaps the “normal development” of the human mind. In consequence of
this displacement the boundaries between sane and neurotic must be shifted
towards the pathological.
*x
Leo Kaplan’s book “Psychological Problems” (39) is a collection of im-
portant papers on general psychology in the light of Psycho-Analysis. ‘“Re-
pression and Psychical Polarity’ connects the idea of ambivalency
with that as expressed by Pikler—that no representation is thinkable
without the simultaneous presence of its opposite and that it can only be
represented by the abstraction of its opposite.
*
We are indebted to Groddeck (29) for the first courageous endeavour to
make use of Freudian teaching in organic medicine. The compiler suggests
that purely organic maladies such as inflammation, tumours etc. are somatic
reactions to psychical conflicts. However unexpected and improbable such
suggestions may sound, they should not be cast aside “a priori’: no one who
is convinced of the reciprocal interaction of the psychical and the physio-
logical in psycho-analysis will consider them as impossible, though certainly
such assurances require further and more convincing proof than is given here.
x
Ortvay in a small pamphlet (51) draws attention to the remarkable
resemblance between the laws of inheritance according to Mendel and the
Freudian mechanism of repression. The supression of an inherited charac-
teristic (recession) is analagous to repression. In both cases a characteristic
is reduced to a latent condition and if it gains expression at all it is only in
minor traits of character. Instead of “dominant” and “recessive” one could
use the term “compromise formation”: the latent disposition can overpower
the dominant one (analagous with psychosis). It appears as though inherited
entities stood in the same relation to each other as complexes do with their
314 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
attendant affect. The author believes that when repression and psychical
conflict is met with, one may presume a conflict between inherited entities.
He invites the co-operation of psycho-analysts on the problems of inheritance.
The psychical character traits are to be regarded as belonging to the inherited
entities.
ak
Eitingon (7) points out in some detail that Jung has mistaken a biological
ethical philosophy for psychology.
Dr. Weissfeld (60) also blames Jung for confusing biology and psychology,
while Freud insists upon a distinct differentiation. Weissfeld occupies himself
with the boundary line between affect and vegetative phenomena. Jung, instead
of explaining the irrefutable fact of the metamorphosis of affect, evades the
question; his “Libido” or “Will” is not sufficiently powerful to justify the
transformation. The author substitutes the principles of his theory of affect
metamorphosis.
*
Adolf F. Meyer (47) presents the best criticism that has yet appeared
on the errors of Jung’s school, which is all the more noteworthy as previous
to the latest publication of Jung Meyer could distinguish no essential difference
between the opinions of the former and Freud. Meyer now writes of Jung that
he lacks insight into the idea of repression and has a confused misconcep-
tion of the unconscious, whilehe lacks perception for the dynamic and economic
relations.
a
Professor Janet (Paris) delivered an address before the International
Congress in London criticising Psycho-Analysis. Ernest Jones (33) points out
that Janet’s errors and misrepresentations are due partly to a lack of know-
ledge of the subject and partly to resistance.
x
At the end of the review comes a summary of the works of the writer
(Dr. Ferenczi).
After relating the history of the illness of a young man who be-
came a paranoidal dement after a surgical castration, the writer asks the
question whether a narcissistic neurosis can be traumatically induced and
replies in the affirmative. Physical disease or an injury can cause a trau-
matic regression to narcissism, / ¢. induce a narcissistic neurosis. These are
the “patho-neuroses” (12), Another part of the body can take on the qua-
lities of the genitalia in consequence of the original stimulus being displaced
by illness. This theory is supported by observations on diseased organs.
There occurs not only a pleasurable excitability in the diseased organ, but
it also monopolises the entire interest and Libido of the subject. The
GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES 315
erotogenic zones are the most susceptible in this respect, but no part of
the body is entirely free of erotogenic qualities and the possibility of
pathoneurotic disease lies everywhere. Among these zones the skin,
the mouth, the anus and the genitalia are severally considered in
this connection, particularly the latter. Puerperal psychosis, for instance,
is the result of patho-neurotic disturbances caused by genital trauma
in the act of giving birth; in consequence of a pathological increase
the Libido is partly transfered from the genitalia on to the child (in the same
manner from the bowels on to their contents), The impulse in insane persons
to castrate themselves is a brutal attempt to rid the ego from a local
heaping-up of Libido. It is possible that this increase of libido plays a useful
part in organic healing processes. The problem of masochism cannot be
unravelled without the help of patho-neurotic “pleasure-pain”. From this
idea we also gain some light on the female (passive) sex-aim and genital
system. The physical injury in defloration which was in the origin painful,
acquires a secondary characteristic of pleasure in consequence of the patho-
neurotic increase of Libido, the injury results in a transferance of “erotogenicity”
from the clitoris to the vagina, on to the instrument that has caused the
wound and on to the wielder of the weapon.
“Materialisation Phenomena’ is the term applied by the writer of the
Review to those psycho-physical conditions when a wish is plastically
represented as though by magic from the disposable materials in the body.
These conditions are the foundations of convetsion hysteria and indicate a
regression to the “proto-psyche”, the reflex stage of psychical phenomena.
The stimulating power of the materialisation emanates in hysteria from genital
sexuality. The normal differentiation of the functioning of the actual organ and the
prime erotic organs (genitalia) is in abeyance in hysteria and in consequence
of this confusion hysterics are liable to “multi-rendering”, to jump from the
psychical into the physical, revealing a part of the organic foundations upon
which symbolism is built up in the mind. The hysterical symptom is a
“heterotype genital function”. The materialisation phenomena also throw a
light on the physiological correlate to artistic talent.
The writer mentions that in one of the first attempts at “Active Tech-
nique” (14) in Psycho-Analysis he almost suceeded in experimentally reuni-
ting released affect to its historical symbol. For instance, the barring of
unconscious reaction-paths of stimulation often succeeds in breaking down
resistance by means of the increased pressure of energy. This form of
experimental psychology is well qualified to convince us of the stability of
the Freudian doctrine of the neuroses.
One. sentence from the article on “Hysterical Hypochondria” may be
quoted: “It seems as though the same heaping-up of Libido in an organ
could result in either a purely hypochondriacal, or else in a conversion-
hysterical, superstructure according to the sexual constitution of the patient.”
The writer came to the conclusion, on the basis of the analysis of a
transitory conversion symptom, that the explanation of every psychogenic
physical symptom and every conversion phenomenon demanded the accept-
ation of a “tertium comparationis” between the above mentioned psychical
and physical processes, possessing the identity of a subtle mechanism.
316
tn & WwW WD
COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND EDUCATION
. Abraham, K.:
Thid.:
. Bernfeld, S.:
. Lbid.:
. Bhiker, H.:
. Brahn, P.:
. Diettrid:
. Freud, Su:
. Lbid.:
. Lbid.:
. Lhid.:
. Lbid.:
. Lbid.:
. Lbid.:
. Ibid. :
. bid:
. Haberlin, P.:
by
H. HUG-HELLMUTH, Vienna. *
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Untersuchungen tiber die friiheste pragenitale Entwick-
lungsstufe der Libido. Zesr, B. IV, S. 71.
. Andreas«Salomé, L.: “Anal” und “Sexual”. Jmago. B. IV, S. 249.
. Lbid.:
Zum Typus Weib. /mago. B. Ill, S. 1.
Drei Briefe an einen Knaben. 1917.
Zur Psychologie des Unmusikalischen. Nebst Bemerkungen
liber ‘Psychologie und Psychoanalyse. Ardive f d@. ges.
Psydol. B. XXXIV, H. 2.
Die Psychoanalyse in der Jugendbewegung. Jmago. B. V,
S. 283.
Gattenwahl und Ehe. Jmago. B. Ill, S. 477.
Psychoanalyse und Kind. 1. Teil: Die pad. Praxis. Ard. f.
Pad. B. Il, H. 3, 1915.
Was kénnen wir aus der Psychotherapie der S. Freud-
schen Schule fiir die Therapie unserer Seelsorge lernen?
Monatssdrift f. Pastoraltheof. 1916, Febr., 17. (Kriegsheft).
Drei Abhandlungen zur Sexualtheorie. III. Aufl., 1915.
Vorlesungen zur Einftihrung in die Psychoanalyse. 1917.
Aus der Geschichte einer infantilen Neurose. Sammlung
kleiner Schriften zur Neurosenlehre. IV. Folge, 1918.
Eine Kindheitserinnerung aus “Dichtung und Wahrheit” mit
zwei Beobachtungen von Hug-Hellmuth: “Zum Hinauswerfen
von Gegenstaénden aus dem Fenster von kleinen Kindern”’.
Imago. B. V, S. 49.
“Ein Kind wird geschlagen”. Beitrag zur Kenntnis der
Entstehung der Perversionen. Zest. B. V, S. 151.
. Friedjung, josef K.: Die Erziehung der Eltern. 1916.
. Ibid:
Die Sonderstellung der Kinderheilkunde. GrundsAtzliches
zum padiatr. Unterricht. Med, Kiin. 1917, H. 5.
Arztliche Winke fiir die Uberwachung der kind]. Sexualitat.
Med. Klin. 1918, H. 14.
Die Pathologie des einzigen Kindes. Ergebn. d. inneren
Med. und Kinderhetlkunde. B. XNI, 1919.
Erlebte Kinderheilkunde. 1919.
Uber die sexuelle Aufklirung ‘unserer Schuljugend. Mit-
teilungen des d.-3. Volksgesundheitsamtes. Mai 1920.
Psychoanalyse und Erziehung. Berner Bund. 1917, Sonntags-
blatt 9 und 10.
Translated by Barbara Low.
22.
23.
24,
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND EDUCATION 317
Ibid. : Psychoanalyse und Erziehung. Zest. B. Il, S. 213.
Ibid. : Das Ziel der Erziehung. 1917.
Von Hattingberg, H., Analerotik, Angstlust und Eigensinn. Zes¢. B. Il,
S. 244.
Ibid. : Zur Psychologie des kindlichen Eigensinnes. Zestsd&r. fiir
Pathopsydol, Erganz.-B. 1914, I.
Vom wahren Wesen der Kinderseele. Edtd. by H. v. Hug-Hellmuth.
Imago, Ul, 1914, with contributions by Eitingon S., Gott
und Vater; S. 89; Hug»Hellmuth, L. Andreas-Salomé “Im
Zwischenland”, S. 85; Reh, T4., Kindl. Gottesvorstellung, S. 93,
Vaterkomplex, S.94, Kind und Tod, S.94; Hug-Hellimuth,
Kinderbriefe, S. 462; Jmago. V,1917, HugeHellmuth, Vom
frihen Hassen und Lieben, S. 121, Mutter—Sohn,
Vater—Tochter, S. 129; Mu/taretuff, Eine Kinderbeobach-
tung, S. 123; Sadés, H., Kinderszene, S. 124; Harnrk, E.,
Anatole France “Uber die Seele des Kindes”, S. 126;
Retkh, T4., Eine Kindheitserinnerung von Alex. Dumas,
S. 128; Abraham, K., Dreikasehoch, S. 294; Reik, Th,
Infantile Wortbrticken, S. 295, Gegensinn “der infantilen
Worte, S. 295.}
Hug-Hellmuth, H.:; Die Kriegsneurose des Kindes. Pester Lloyd. 1915,
15. Marz.
Lazar, Erwin, Die nosologische und die kriminologische Bedeutung des
Elternkonfliktes der Jugendlichen. Zrser. f Kinderheilk.
B. Xi, H.5)0.\ 6.
Lindworski, H.: Die Psychoanalyse, eine neue Erziehungsmethode? Stimmen
der Zeit. 46, 1915, 2. Heft.
Marcinowski, j.: Zum Kapitel Liebeswahl und Charakterbildung. /mago,
B. V., S. 196. y
Mensendiek, O.: Zur Technik des Unterrichtes und der Erziehung
wahrend der psychoanalytischen Behandlung. jahrb.
B. V, S. 455;
Miler, Hermann v.; Psychoanalyse und Padagogik. 1917.
Pfeifer, S.: | Au®erungen infantilerotischer Triebe im Spiele. Jmago.
V, S. 243.
Pfister, O.: Das Kinderspiel als Friihsymptom krankhafter Entwicklung,
zugleich ein Beitrag zur Wissenschaftspsychologie. Saul
reform. Jahrg. X, 1917.
Ibid. : Psychoanalyse und Jugendforschung. Berner Seminarblatter.
B. VIII, H. 11—13, 1914.
Tbid., Was bietet die Psychoanalyse dem Erzieher!? 1917.
Ibid: Gefahrdete Kinder und ihre psychoanalytische Behand-
lung. “jugendwohifabrt’’, Beilage zur Sdweizer Lehrer
zettung. 1918, H. 1.
Putnam, J. J.: Allgemeine Gesichtspunkte zur psychoanalyt. Bewegung.
Zeit. B. IV, S. 1.
Sadger, j.: Vomungeliebten Kinde. Fortsdritte der Medizin. 34.Jahrg.,
1916/17.
318 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
41, Tagebuch eines halbwiichsigen Madchens. Quellenschriften zur seelischen
Entwicklung, Nr. 1, 1919.
42. Smaller contributions may further be found in the Mitrerlungen der Zettschrift
fiir dratl. Ps.» A. Bd. Ul, 1914: Bhiber, H., Der sogenannte
nattirliche Beschaftigungstrieb, S. 29; Ferenczf, 5S. Zur
Ontogenese des Geldinteresses. S.507; Spie/rein, 5., Tier-
'symbolik und Phobie bei einem Knaben, S. 375; — B. Ill,
1915: Friedjung, jf. K. Typische Eifersucht auf jtingere
Geschwister und Ahnliches, S. 154; Wes, Ed, Beobach-
tungen infantiler SexualauSerungen, S. 106; — B. IV, 1916:
Abraham, K., Einige Belege zur Gefiihlseinstellung weib-
licher Kinder gegentiber den Eltern, S. 154; Ferenczi, S.,
Symmetr. Bertihrungszwang, S, 266; Refk, Z4., Aus dem
Seelenleben eines zweijahrigen Knaben, S. 329; — im
Abschnitte “Aus dem infantilen Seelenleben’’: Zett, Bd. V,
1919; von B...., Zur infantilen Sexualitat, S. 115; Jha,
Zur Idiosynkrasie gegen Speisen, S. 117; Deutsdé, H., Der
erste Liebeskummer eines zweijahrigen Knaben, S. 111;
Frozt, Aus dem Kinderleben, S. 109; Ferenczi, JS., Ekel
vor dem Friihstiick, S. 117; HWits@mann, E., Uber einen
sporadischen Riickfall ins Bettnasse bei einem vierjahrigen
Kinde, S. 115; v. Raalte, Fr.: Auferungen von Sexualitat
bei Kindern, S. 103; — im Abschnitte “Besrrdge zur Traum
deutung’’: Zeit, ll,1914: Sprelrein, J5.: Zwei Mensestraume,
Sy 32:
*
Unperturbed by the cries of indignation and warning raised continually,
since the appearance of Freud’s Analysis of “Little Hans” and “From the
Psychic Life of a Child” (Hug-Hellmuth), by the opponents of the Freudian
school who believe that Psycho-Analysis is dangerous to children and robs
them of their innocence, psycho-analytic science has continued its investi-
gation of the subject of child psychology and has estimated the value for
education of the knowledge acquired in this field.
From the analysis of the grown person we reap important facts as to
the psychic occurrences of childhood and their results in later life; the imme-
diate observation of children makes possible not only the corroboration of
these revealed facts, but also an insight into the mechanism of the psychic
phenomena of infancy and youth, into the preparation and the incidence of
neuroses in infancy and into the development of character as dependent
upon experience. Finally, the criticism of the personal writings of other than
psycho-analytic authors, such as memories of childhvod, the voluntary con-
fessions of poets, diaries and letters of young people and mothers’ daily
memoranda of the spiritual development of their children, affords a valuable
addition to the methods of research already specified.
Foremost in the first group are the works of Freud (10, 11) in which is
once more set forth the rdle of sexuality in children and (10) the oral phase
shown to be the earliest stage in the development of the Libido; next we
CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND EDUCATION 319
would place Abraham’ s invaluable investigation (2) of the pregenital stage
of the development of the Libido, (1) of the way in which they appear in
the analysis of adults and how the observation of children confirms their
existence. Abraham draws thence important conclusions as to the origin of
certain symptoms of neurosis, of nervous craving for food, refusal of food,
especially milk, or a morbid desire for only liquid nourishment or sweet
stuff. The equation “food-loving’ Abraham traces through the analysis of
a case of dementia praecox to the deepest roots of the oral or cannibalistic
phase of the infantile Libido.
Of the greatest significance for the understanding of the incidence of
perversions, and especially of masochism, is Freud’s investigation in “A Child
is Being Beaten” (4). He reveals there three forms of neurotic phantasy: the
earliest ‘father beats a child” he describes as “not masochistic”, for the phantasy-
maker is not the whipped child but one who is hated by him; the second
phantasy, which, unlike the first, and the third as represented in the title of
the treatise, is never remembered and therefore remains unconscious and to
be reconstructed by analysis, is pronouncedly masochistic, for it runs: ‘Father
beats me”; the third has the generalised indefinite form a “child is beaten”,
and brings with it strong sexual excitement, leading, at its height, to genital
onanism; it is apparently sadistic. At the base of these phantasies lie the
early incestuous choice of objects, their displacement and the feeling of guilt
whose origin is unknown. In his explanation of the genesis of perversions,
of masochism in particular, and in his substantiation of the part played in
the dynamics of neurosis by the differentiation of the sexes, Freud makes
use of his observation of six cases. In his opinion, the relationship between
perversions and the (dipus complex is that the latter, in breaking down,
leaves perversion the sole inheritor of the libidinous attraction and the sense
of guilt that accompanies it. He suggests “that the sexual aberrations of
children, as well as those of adults, derive from the same complex”, which
may be described as the root-complex of neurosis.
Of equally fundamental significance is the essay “From the History ofan
Infantile Neurosis” (13). In this work, Freud has undertaken an investigation
“which carries research into earlier phases and into deeper strata of the
psychic life than any previous attempt has done”. The results are extra-
ordinarily valuable, not only for the building up of neurological science, and
for the convincing demonstration of the agreement between psycho-analytic
and biological findings, but also for educational purposes. The lasting effects
of the earliest impressions of childhood, the primordial scenes, whether actually
experienced or only imagined, are here indicated in a concrete case,
illustrating the way in which the neuroses of the adult are built up from
those of the infant; how the food irregularities of children have, amongst other
causes, a psychic cause; the significance to be attached to the child’s re-
lapse from ‘“naughtiness” to anxiety and what is to be looked for behind the
religious broodings and pious ceremonials of children. To recognise the
difference between consciousness and the unconscious of children and of
adults is, to my mind, of the greatest importance for the curative educatio-
nal psycho-analysis; for the perception of this difference is one of the factors
which demands that analytic technique for children and for adults shall not
21
320 COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
be quite identical. In setting forth the problem, which forms the conclusion
of this classic, Freud offers the hypothesis of the “given schemata” and
“a species of knowledge, difficult to define, that operates in children as a
preparation for understanding”, and that is comparable to “the instinctive
knowledge of animals”. ‘This instinctive knowledge”, which naturally in-
cludes the sexual, “is the core of the Unconscious, a primitive psychic acti-
vity which... perhaps has, in everyone, the power of drawing to itself
higher psychic processes.” Upon this assumption Freud founds his belief
in repression as a return to this instinctive stage; “thus man pays for his new
and great acquisitions by his susceptibility to neurosis, and by the very
possibility of neurosis witnesses to the existence of earlier instinctive stages.”
The dreams of early childhood may thus be described as “bringing, to the
Unconscious, material which protects it from being wasted by subsequent
development.”
A work which is an excellent condensation and summary of the know-
ledge acquired in the field of psycho-analytic investigation of children, comes
from the hand of our lately deceased colleague Professor Putnam (38). To-
wards the circulation of our findings in other than psycho-analytic journals,
there are articles by Diettrich (9), Friedjung (15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 42),
Haberlin (21, 23), Hug-Hellmuth (27), Pfister (35), and Sadger (39, 40). Sadger,
in his article on ‘‘Unloved Children”, discusses the influence on the later
development of the individual of the lack of affection in early years and
comes to the same conclusion as that expressed by the present writer in
1913, namely: that the unloved child, because it has never been taught to
love, has in later years the greatest difficulty in finding itself.
An outstanding contribution to the subject of the connection between
character and infantile sexuality is that of Hattingberg (24, 25), tracing the
relationship between anal-erotism and obstinacy; he infers from his ob-
servations that childish obstinacy springs from the enjoyment of fear, and
from this causative connection he extracts noteworthy educational con-
clusions.
The works of Marcinowski (30) and Bliiher (7) are also concerned with
the enormous significance of the experiences and the suspensions of feeling
which in early childhood “make impressions so powerful that they are de-
cisive for the remainder of life and form the totality of the individual
character, in which is included his sexual character.”
Of singular interest are the works of Bernfeld (5, 6). Whilst in his short
essay “On the Psychology of the Unmusical” in which he explains the
apparent lack of musical endowment by strong “feeling-motives” he frankly
admits his continued attitude of suspension towards Psycho-Analysis in the
statement “here the psycho-analyst ‘would speak of death-wishes towards
the sister, but we will be more cautious”; at the same time, in his treatise
on “Psycho-Analysis in the Movement for Educational Reform” he stands
quite unmistakably on psycho-analytical ground. This treatise is an attempt to
scatter the prejudices of those educationalists who consider that the spiritual
and ethical in youth can, through the medium of Psycho-Analysis, be ren-
dered “unspiritual” and “unethical”, that a section of our youth repudiates
Psycho-Analysis “from motives of self-preservation against dangerous
CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND EDUCATION 321
knowledge”, another is under’the sway of a form of “Spiritualisation’’ now so
frequently to be met, and that a third, the group about Bltiher, bases its
philosophy of life, and its conduct, upon the existence, so clearly defined
by Psycho-Analysis, of homosexuality, and in “Men Associations, that is of
Youth concentrated on Manhood” find the satisfaction of their erotic instincts;
a tendency for which Psycho-Analysis is not responsible.
The two important essays of Pfeifer (33), and Pfister (34) treat of the
significance for maturity of the games of childhood. Pfeifer analyses cer-
tain games of “catch” and traces in them the part played by infantile erotic
impulses: sado-masochistic desires, anal-erotic interests, uterine and birth
phantasies and the desire for omnipotence are all realised in the game; Pfeifer
sees in the reproduction of the play period by certain games of hide-and-
seek a reversal of the power of the father over the child, a displacement,
as it were, of the incest-desire. The products of the repression of infantile
and erotic impulses and of their objects seem to him to determine the
character of the game. According to him the originating cause and the form
of the game lie in a striving of the suppressed sexual impulses towards
activity and satisfaction. He concludes with a discussion, from the psycho-
analytic standpoint, of the game theories of Spencer-Schiller and of Groos.
Pfister demonstrates in an analysis as pastor the way in which the child's
inclination to games may yield valuable indications of his psychic develop-
ment, in betraying the existence of unhealthy tendencies, and how, through
careful supervision, he may be protected from many future psychic injuries.
To these two essays may be added Bliiher’s little sketch (42) on the
subject of “The So-Called Natural Impulse towards Activity”, though its
source is not analysis, but the immediate observation of children. We meet
therein the fact, so well-known to analysts, though still denied by the laity,
that the motive forces in the games of children are very frequently grossly
sexual, and tend to derive especially from anal-erotic interests, which the
unrestrained child expresses, without shame, in words.
Lou Andreas-Salomé illuminates with poetic power the obscure relation-
ships between the sexual curiosity of children, anal-erotism and the veto that
suppresses them (2). She endeavours (3), plunging deeply into the memories
of her own childhood, to explain the development of feminine types by the
infantile erotic focus upon the father, and the Ego-cult of small children by
the indestructible first impressions of childhood.
Andreas-Salomé’s writings (2—4) with their rich material, drawn from
the writer’s personal memories and from her observations of other children
form, as it were, a connecting link between the theoretical studies of
authors who draw upon their psycho-analytic practice upon adults and those
which are the results of direct observation of the child’s mind.
In this last connection there are a considerable number of smaller con-
tributions: on the emotional focus of the child upon its father and mother
[Abraham (42), Deutsch (42), Hug-Hellmuth (26), Reik (26)], upon its brothers
and sisters [Friedjung (42)], the childish idea of God [Eitingon (26),
Reik (26)], upon infantile sexual expression [v. Raalte (42), Spielrein (42),
Weiss (42), Frost (42), Bliher (42)], the animal symbolism and phobias of
children [Spielrein (42)]. The psycho-analytic interpretation by Freud (13) of
21*
322 | COLLECTIVE REVIEWS
one of Goethe’s childhood memories is supported by some illustrations from
child-life fHug-Hellmuth (13)]. Reik (26) treats the subject of the deve-
lopment of word meanings amongst children. Abraham (26) deals with the
emotional values which help to form the words of children. Hitschmann (42)
and Ferenczi (42) supply interesting contributions on the subject of childish
anal and urethral eroticism, and on the more or less difficult accomodation
of children to the demands of civilisation and their occasional relapses into
éarly infantile phases. The children’s letters supplied by Hug-Hellmuth (26)
afford us a clear glimpse into the centres of interest of developing youth,
so well-concealed from the adult. On the subject of the dream-life of
children there is only Spielrein’s single communication (42). A valuable con-
tribution to the study of children who are difficult to educate comes from
Lazar (28), the director of the Department of Curative Education of the
Vienna Children’s Clinic. The work is a fine testimonial to the fact that
even those scientists who stand far apart from psycho-analytic circles, cannot,
if they are honest, escape the influence of Psycho-Analysis.
The most valuable document on the subject of psychic development is
the recently published “Young Girl’s Diary” (41), the record first of a child
and then of a girl at the beginnings of maturity. It gives us, as nothing be-
fore had done, a clear vision of the joy and sorrow and of the innocent
guilt-laden desires of a half-fledged soul. The hate and love-filled relation-
ships to the brothers and sisters, the already libidinous sentiment towards the
father, the characteristic wavering, in the period preceding puberty, in the
choice between one and the other sex, the shuddering of fear and desire at
the first contact with sensual reality, the profound effect of the illness and
death of the beloved mother, the self-reproach and the religious doubts
which arise thence in the young soul—all these experiences are set down so
naively and palpably that the diary affords to those parents and teachers who
are aware of the greatness of their task and to all psychologists, a rich
source of incitement to plumb the depths of the problem of the developing
soul, From no educational library should this book be missing.
Side by side with this “practical pedagogy” from the hand of a child,
we may place the excellent contributions to the, subject of education
published by the Swiss analysts during the last few years. Foremost among.
these are Pfister’s “Imperilled Children” (37) and ‘What Psycho-Analysis
Offers to the Teacher” (36). His activities as pastor bring within his reach
an extraordinarily rich material, the possession of which both justifies him
in giving, and pledges him assiduously to give, advice in the matter of edu-
cation that is based upon psycho-analytic foundations. But there is one re-
monstrance, already voiced by me elsewhere and that I cannot here withold.
To whatever extent his father-authority as spiritual advisor may facilitate
his psycho-analytic work, he is not well-advised in giving such excessive
prominence to the ease and rapidity with which, in so many cases, his
sufferers have been cured. Every prcatising analyst knows how protractedly
laborious and wearisome are both medical and curative-educational analyses.
In my opinion Pfister prejudices both himself and the method by continued
pronouncements upon this so variable factor. Mensendieck in his essay (31)
makes some useful suggestions as to the arrangement of the school-life of
CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND EDUCATION 323
young people during the course of psycho-analytic treatment with a view to
its adaptation thereto. The re-education of the pupil in the fulfilment of duty
and in the duty of obedience, and the self-knowledge of the teacher are, in
Mensendieck’s opinion, together with the harmonious cooperation of the
analyst and the teacher, of prime importance for the success of the treatment.
The third group of essays on child psychology deals with the psycho-
analytic value of poetical writings and of autobiographies, voluntary con-
fessions, short stories and novels, in so far as they treat of the development
of the youthful soul. We may learn how authors such as, for instance, Dumas
and W. Humboldt, whose writings date from past decades, even from past
centuries, intuitively perceived the interdependency of psychic processes with
which psycho-analytic science has made us familiar.
It does not surprise either Reik (26), Sachs (26) or myself to find in
the work of certain contemporary authors, for example, in that of Lou
Andreas-Salomé, Meta Schoepp, Geijerstam and Anatole France, the conscious
or unconscious influence of psycho-analytic modes of thought [Hug-Hell-
muth (26), Harnik (26)].
BOOK REVIEWS
Tue Evements or Practica Psycuo-Anatysis. By Paul Bousfield,
M.R.C.S. (Eng.), L.R.C.P. (Lond.), (Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co.
Ltd., London, 1920. Pp. 272. Price 10s. 6d.).
This book purports to be a presentation of psycho-analysis for
the instruction of practitioners and students. We have therefore
to examine the author’s qualifications for teaching the subject, and
primarily, of course, his own knowledge of it.
In the preface already we are astonished to read of Freud’s
“theory that sexual desire is the fundamental desire underlying a/f
other desires and emotions” (author’s italics), a view with which
the author repeatedly disagrees (pp. vii, 31, 34). He proposes to
better it by grouping impulses under the two headings of self-
preservation and self-propagation. He evidently does not know that
this division has always been made by Freud, who is never tired
of insisting on it. As Freud’s whole theory of the psychoneuroses
is based on the conception of conflict between the sexual and the
non-sexual (ego) impulses, this is rather a fundamental mis-
representation, one that we usually expect to find in writers whose
knowledge of the subject is gleaned from distant hearsay. The
author more especially objects to Freud’s supposed belief that
nutritional impulses are a part of sex (pp. 29, 30); Freud’s actual
belief, of course, is merely that certain nutritional impulses are often
accompanied by sexual sensations.
The novel view is put forward that no shifting of excitability
from the clitoris to the vagina takes place as a rule in normal
women; when it occurs it is to be regarded as a regression to
cloacal erotism. In 150 cases of apparently normal women, three
were completely anaesthetic, fourteen felt pleasure chiefly referred
to the vagina but without orgasm, and in the remainder, without
exception, the glans clitoris was the essential seat of sensation
(pp. 88, 89). This is, of course, the opposite of the psycho-analytical
theory of sexual development.
In contrast with Freud, who has discovered only one type of
324
BOOK REVIEWS : 325
dream, the author recognises three (p. 105). One of these “refers
always to incidents in which the actual preservation of life itself
appeared threatened”. The second, rarer type is the telepathic
dream. Then comes the Freudian dream, which is said to com-
prise over 99 per cent of dreams. (Incidentally, the author holds that
over 99 per cent of our actions are determined by past experiences, free
will being an exceptional occurrence (p. 256), a statement which
reminds one of the “last-ditchers” who used to hold that G. P. I.
was due to syphilis in over 99 per cent of the cases, but not always).
As to the function of dreams, the author disagrees with both Freud
and Jung and is “inclined to a third and more or less intermediate
idea” (p. 114). This is that the dream contains both a repressed
wish and the sublimation of this.
In the section on psychopathology Freud’s classification is “varied
slightly in order to simplify it from the point of view of the
student” (p. 131, 132). Psychoneurosis is declared to be synony-
mous with hysteria, and this is subdivided into five: 1. Conversion
hysteria. 2. Anxiety hysteria. 3. Compulsion hysteria (compulsion
neurosis). 4. Paranoid hysteria (early paranoia). 5. Dementia prae-
cox (certain cases of). We are not told when or how the hysteria
passes over into paranoia or dementia praecox, but, quite apart
from this detail, to describe this classification as a slight variation
from that used by Freud is a considerable stretch of language.
The pathogenesis of the obsessional neurosis is given as follows:
“The conflict in a compulsion hysteria is generally between a re-
pressed wish and repressing forces which are not true inhibitions,
and the condition always reveals a purely erotic basis... It thus
differs slightly from the conversion hysteria in its primitive
origin... In the compulsion neuroses the actual mechanism of
formation is much the same as in the conversion hysteria” (p. 156).
The ignorance here displayed is hardly excusable when there
exists in English such an excellent account of the subject in
Hitschmann’s book. The complexes present in the obsessional neu-
rosis are said to be the CEdipus one, the homosexual, anal-erotic,
and exhibitionistic (p. 159), # e. practically all the sexual com-
plexes with the exception of the one actually most characteristic
of the disease, sadism. Automatic writing and “many cases of
alcoholism and drug-taking” are included in the obsessional neu-
rosis, on the curious ground that they are acts not under the
patient’s control, a feature one would have thought they shared
326 BOOK REVIEWS
with all neurotic symptoms. The author has successfully treated
six cases of paranoia, with only one relapse, but it may be that
he means by this cases of “paranoid hysteria”. Dementia praecox
is dismissed in a few words, for the author “has not yet attempted
to analyse a case of this kind, nor has he been satisfied that any
of the cases that have been reported to him as being cases of
dementia praecox have in fact been such” (p. 166). This statement
is followed by the cryptic remark: “I therefore include this disease
in this chapter with some misgiving, and more because several
well-known analysts abroad have vouched for it than because I am
as yet convinced”.
Still more remarkable, however, is the chapter on “the tech-
nique of psycho-analysis”. Nearly a half of it is taken up with an
account of the word-association test, which is a rarely-used adjunct
rather than a part of the regular technique. The rest contains al-
most as many errors in technique as thespace could well hold. Ignoring
the unrivalled value of the first hour, the author advises not to
start with free associations, but with asking questions about the
development of the symptoms. In the next hours the history of
the patient’s life is inquired into, and if he is intelligent this is
followed by “an explanation of the nature of analysis and of the
constitution of the unconscious mind, it being pointed out what
we mean by repressed conflicts and by infantile sexuality”. Then
begins “the analysis proper”, usually with the word association
test, after which the patient’s attention is directed (!) on to any-
thing that the physician thinks will serve as a starting-point. The
patient is not merely allowed to write down his dreams (which is
assuredly bad technique), but is asked to take a pencil and paper
with him to bed for the express purpose. Transference is thus
defined: “The ideas that come to the surface will be projected (!)
upon the physician: for instance, the physician may replace the
father in the patient’s dream, etc.” One sees that the author is
careless about the meaning of the simplest terms. We learn that
the period of transference “will generally be found to be quite
short”. The practitioner is advised to vary the length of the inter-
view, making it longer or shorter according to the patient’s mood,
a procedure highly detrimental to the patient's interests. The author
often cures cases in less than three months, and quotes one of
sixteen years’ standing that “cleared up completely in two
months”.
BOOK REVIEWS 327
The most astonishing part of the book is reserved for the last
section, that on education. Here an ardent plea is entered for a
reform of society on an extensive scale with the aim of reducing
the present differentiation of the two sexes. The author states that
the world devotes nine-tenths of its whole energy to artificially
increasing the difference between the sexes “with the appalling
result that while it teaches morality it breeds most potent forms
of perversion and immorality as fast as it can” (p. 265). He in-
dulges in a tirade against these harmful differences, such as
clothing, the use of different prefixes (Mr. and Mrs.) for male and
female, the alternation of the sexes at dinner parties, and so on.
The lengths to which his feminism goes must be read to be be-
lieved. In fact, the only difference to which he gives assent is the
curious one that women analysts should be analysed before under-
taking work. Now this is not the place to discuss or criticise the
views held by the author, which are purely his personal affair, but
the strongest protest must be made against his putting them forth
in the name of psycho-analysis. To inculcate in a self-styled text-
book of psycho-analysis, as part of the teachings of that science,
views that would be repudiated as bizarre by every psycho-
analyst is a procedure for which it is not easy to find a suitable
epithet.
The style in which the book is written is slovenly, and the
bibliographical references are always incomplete and most often
inaccurate. The more fundamental errors in its contents have al-
ready been noted. The following are a few of the less important
ones. A voyeur is defined as a form of erotic gratification (p. XII).
Peeping is described as the active form of exhibitionism (p. 57),
whereas really the two activities in question represent the active
and passive forms of a single impulse. Reaction-formations are
confounded with sublimations (pp. 61, 66), narcissism with omni-
potence of thought (pp. 100, 101), and repression with suppression
(pp. 107, 108). Freud is said to use the term “Electra-complex”
(p. 77), which he has never done—for reasons he has given.
Freud’s formula for the mechanism of paranoia is ascribed to Stoddart
(p. 163).
There is thus much to be said of the book on the negative
side. On the positive side we can only say that the author dis-
plays a considerable talent for elementary presentation, one which
would be useful in dealing with a subject of which he had first
328 BOOK REVIEWS
made an adequate study. As it is, we can only designate the book
as wholly superfluous and exceedingly misleading.
We wish to comment, in concluding, on the fashion that some
publishers have of writing advertisements of books without con-
sulting their authors. We are sure that Mr. Bousfield would never
have sanctioned the pretentious announcement of his book as
“The first English treatise, by a practising Physician, to furnish
an ‘account of the Theory, Technique, and Scope of Psycho-
Analysis”. H E. J.
GrunpzicE DER Psycuoanatyss. By Leo Kaplan, (Deuticke, Vienna.
Pp. 306.).
This book purports to give a systematical account of psycho-
analysis. One therefore has to compare it with the only two other
books having the same aim, namely Hitschmann’s and Pfister’s
(those by Brill and the reviewer are not quite comparable, being
rather expositions of special aspects of the subject). Of the three,
Hitschmann’s is certainly the most accurate and authentic, its chief
defect being its condensed nature and its baldness. Pfister’s has
the advantage over both the others of containing a large number
of examples of analytical work taken from actual cases, but this
is more than counterbalanced by the confused and sometimes
inaccurate presentation. The principal value of the present book lies
in the large amount of material extracted from non-medical sources,
the author having evidently an extensive knowledge of folk-lore
and allied subjects. The fresh analytical material he contributes
consists mainly of dream analyses. A prominent striking feature is
the author’s agreeable and interesting style. From the point of
view of accuracy there is nothing left to be desired. The book,
therefore, can be cordially recommended as a valuable pendant
to Hitschmann’s work, and as a trustworthy introduction to
psycho-analysis. It should be mentioned further that the author
makes some interesting contributions of his own, notably on the
subjects of suicide and narcissism.
i B,J.
Human Motives. By J. J. Putnam, M.D., (Little, Brown & Co.,
Boston, 1915, Pp. 175.).
This little volume is one of a series designed to extend popular
knowledge on the relation of psychology to individual and social
BOOK REVIEWS 329
welfare, a matter in which, as is known, the author was specially
interested. The six chapters are entitled respectively: Main sources
of motives; The rational basis of religion; The psycho-analytic
movement; Educational bearings of psycho-analysis; Instincts and
ideals; An attempt at synthesis.
In the first chapter Putnam points out the complexity of most
motives, and states: “It usually happens that men are moved by
broader and better motives than they are consciously aware of,
and that to be so moved is, virtually, to acknowledge obligations
of which the final implication can be expressed only in ideal
terms”. This sentence gives the keynote to the whole book. There
are two sorts of motives, constructive and adaptive, and to the
study of these there are two corresponding modes of approach,
that of philosophy and religion on the one hand, and that of
genetic psychology (psycho-analysis) on the other. Both are indis-
pensable methods of study, but if forced to choose between them
Putnam would prefer the former because it deals with man at his
best and highest.
An excellent and accurate general account of psycho-analysis
is given, including its history, though for Putnam it “like all
scientific doctrines is valid only within certain definite limits”.
The chapter on the bearings of psycho-analysis on education,
though charmingly written, is perhaps open to the criticism of
not being precise and concrete enough, especially in regard to
sexuality.
It is not necessary here to describe Putnam’s views on philo-
sophic ideals and the relation of the individual to the universe,
with which the readers of this Journal are already familiar. The
book as a whole, though perhaps rather too general and vague,
is an admirable exposition both of these views and of psycho-
analysis, written in the author’s most seductive style. BJ
*
Minrrary Psycuratry mn Peace anp War. By C. Stanford Read,
M.D.,. (H. K. Lewis & Sons, London. Pp. 168. Price 10s. 6d.).
The opening chapter traces in an interesting way the psycho-
logy of the soldier from the recruiting office to the firing line and
the second chapter gives an account of military psychiatry previous
to 1914 so that a comparison may be made with the prevalence
of mental disorders during the war.
930 BOOK REVIEWS
The rest of the book isa review of the war from a psychiatric
standpoint and few are more capable of performing this task than
Dr. Read, for he was Officer in charge of D Block, Netley, for the
greater part of the war, and in peace time he had had much experience
as medical officer to a large institution for the insane. Moreover,
he is up to date and a strict Freudian, as will be seen by reading —
his book.
The organization for dealing with mental cases in the army is
described in detail and he gives the number of such cases received
at Netley in the form of achart, which demonstrates a steady rise
during the five years of the war. As the author points out, this
is partly due to the gradually increasing size of the army but also
to careless methods of recruiting.
The various mental disorders (dementia praecox, paranoia,
general paralysis, etc.) are then systematically described, especially
in their relationship to war and war conditions, and 32 cases are
more or less fully described.
The book is well written and well got up and it contains sound
criticisms, which should be taken to heart, of several military and civilian
customs in the treatment of the insane.
W. H. B. Stoddart.
* .
A Manuat or Neurastuenta (Nervous Exuaustion). By Ivo Geikie
Cobb, M.D., (Bailligre, Tindall & Cox, London 1920. Demy 8vo.
Pp. 366, Price 12s. 6d.).
This is a full text-book of neurasthenia, where the subject is
treated at length from every point of view, aetiology, symptomato-
logy, and treatment. It contains an interesting ‘historical review
of the subject, and is indeed mainly a compilation from other
writers, The author’s attitude is a catholic one on most points.
He regards neurasthenia as having a mixed origin, and is willing
to concede aetiological significance to almost all factors that have
ever been suggested, from pyorrhoea to mental conflict, and thera-
peutic value to a similarly extensive list of measures, from dieting
and administration of inorganic phosphates to psycho-analysis.
Following most modern writers he excludes from the conception
of neurasthenia, not only psychoneurotic symptoms such as obses-
sions and phobias, but also the anxiety states, so that his definition
of the disease would cover much the same ground as that given
by a psycho-analyst.
BOOK REVIEWS 331
We regret to note a number of important errors in the work’
of historical compilation. The common mistake is made of ascribing
the first conception of neurasthenia to Beard, instead of to Van
Deusen. He gives a diagram to illustrate the evolution of noso-
logical views on the subject (pp. 195, 196) and writes “The later
writers (who are not indicated) have again subdivided the symptoms
originally included in this latter term (7. e. psychasthenia), under
such names as ‘obsessional or compulsion neurosis’, ‘anxiety neu-
rosis, etc.” He does not seem to be aware that the obsessional
neurosis was differentiated thirty-nine years, and the anxiety neu-
rosis seven years, before the appearance’ of Janet’s work on’
psychasthenia, Ferenczi’s important work, which is the chief con-
tribution made to our knowledge of neurasthenia in the past
twenty years, is not mentioned.
As no other psycho-analytical writings are quoted, one must
assume that the author has culled his knowledge of psycho-ana-
lysis exclusively from Stoddart’s “Mind and its Disorders”, a book
which no one, least of all its author, will maintain is an authorita-
tive work on psycho-analysis, for it primarily reflects Dr. Stoddart’s
own general experience and views. Whatever may be the source
of his impressions, Dr. Cobb is under a serious misapprehension
when he states that according to the psycho-analytic school
(pp. 296, 354) neurasthenia is purely of mental origin, and that
the difference between the actual neuroses and the psychoneuroses
is that the former are due to a recent mental disturbance and the
latter to an older one. As is well known, we hold, on the contrary,
that neurasthenia is a purely physical disease: in the reviewer's
“Papers”, for instance, occurs the passage, “Put simply, the actual
neuroses (under which neurasthenia is grouped) are of physical,
psychoneuroses of mental origin..... It is probable that the distur-
bances in the physical sphere are ultimately of a toxic nature”.
Nor is the author’s further statement any truer, that “the analytic
school claim that analysis is the only real cure”. It is equally
misleading for him to say (p. 14) that this school believes auto-
erotism to be the “sole cause” of neurasthenia (of which supposed
view, by the way, he adds the only criticism that “in this volume
we cannot confine ourselves to an etiology of this kind; but must
collect the views held by different schools of thought and offer
them for the consideration of the reader”). Apart from the fact
that it is necessary first to define the kind and degree of auto-erotism,
332 BOOK REVIEWS
it is evident that the author is confounding the words “sole” and
“specific”; we consider, of course, that many factors are operative
in most cases of neurasthenia, but that no primary cases occur
except in the presence of auto-erotic functioning.
In these circumstances the author’s conclusion that he is unable
to give complete adherence to what he conceives to be Freud’s
views on neurasthenia is a matter of no great importance.
r,: J.
*
Functionat Nerve Disgase. Edited by H. Crichton Miller, M.D.,
(Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1920. Price 10s. 6d.).
This is a symposium written by eleven authors.
Dr. Miller in his chapter on Physical Aetiology points out
the importance of taking into consideration the physical as well
as the psychical as a causative factor and visa versa.
Dr. Riddoch deals with Differential Diagnosis; this is the best
chapter in the book.
Dr. Edwin Bramwell on Physical Lreatment is inconclusive
since in his conclusion he states that “most physical symptoms
in functional nervous disease demand psycho-therapeutic care”.
Dr. Prideaux on the Medanism of Hysteria gives his and
other views on the subject. He states on page fifty-two that “Freud’s
view is that the hysteric has inherited a psychosexual constitution
with an excessive development of the sexual instinct”. This is
certainly incorrect, Freud has never expressed such an opinion.
When a writer quotes other people’s views he should give the re-
ference to that author’s statement.
Dr. Hadfield on Treatment by Suggestion and Persuasion does
not bring forward anything new on the subject, but deals with it
very well on the old lines.
Dr. W. H. R. Rivers in his chapter on Repression and Suppression
somewhat confuses the reader by assigning definitions to the words
which for the most part reverse their generally accepted meanings.
It is difficult to see Dr. Rivers’ motive for adopting this unusual
procedure.
Dr. Maurice Nicoll writes on Regression which he deals with
from Jung’s point of view.
Dr. Miller has written a chapter on The Mother Complex.
This is the most loosely written and unsatisfactory chapter in the
book, Dr. Miller states that the normal method by which emotional
BOOK REVIEWS 333
interest of the boy travels through a definite rotation of phases is
called “fixation of libido” in Freudian terminology. Freud has
never been guilty of stating that rotation of phases or movement
is fixation. He makes this further extraordinary statement (p. 119)
and prefaces it by saying that it is one so few medical men grasp that
“The boy’s life of phantasy and romance throughout these twelve
years (six to eighteen) dwells entirely with the male sex”. This
statement is entirely opposed to all known facts. It can only be
supposed that for some reason or other Dr. Miller’s power of ob-
servation in this direction has been very decidedly obscured. His
further remarks on the connection between the military neuropath
and the inebriate father are wholly unconvincing.
The chapter on Psydo-Analysis by Dr. Nicoll and Dr. Young
is simply built up on the Ziirich teachings and therefore should
not be called Psycho-Analysis. In support of this last remark I
quote from Dr. McDougall’s Summary of the chapters of this book
in which he states (p. 197), “Psycho-analysis, as commonly under-
stood, implies that these procedures are undertaken by a physician
who accepts a mass of highly speculative doctrine emanating from
Vienna; and, since the founder and followers of this school have
an indisputable claim to this term, it is only fair and expedient
to avoid the use of it where it is not intended to imply the
acceptance of these esoteric doctrines”. This pronouncement,
coming from such an authority as Dr. McDougall,is the most illumi-
nating statement in the whole book and it is hoped that it willbe
universally adopted.
The last two chapters in the book on 74e Management of the
Neurotic, Institutional by Dr. Bryce and Jndividual by Dr. Culpin
contain some useful points.
Douglas Bryan.
*
Dreams AND Primitive Cutture. By W. H. R. Rivers, M.D., F.R.S.,
(Longmans, Green & Co., London, 1918. Pp. 26. 1s.).
This is a lecture delivered at the John Rylands Library, Manche-
ster, in April 1918. The object of the lecturer is to point out
that the resemblances which Abraham and others have remarked
on between dreams and myths are also to be observed between
dreams and primitive culture, 7 ¢. that the principles of psycho-
analysis have a wide validity in this field. He gives first an account
of Freud’s theory of dreams, which he seems to accept as true
ee
334 BOOK REVIEWS
with certain reservations, notably as regards the formulation of
the censorship concept. He then takes it point by point,
distortion, symbolism, dramatization, displacement, condensation,
secondary elaboration, wish-fulfilment, and so on, and illustrates
all these processes by parallels drawn from his own experience in
Melanesia. He meets the possible objection that such parallels can
be found if only one searches widely enough, first by confining
his examples to one single island two miles wide, and then by laying
stress on the closeness of the parallels cited.
As this is a book distinctly to be read by psycho-analysts, only
one or two features will be noticed here. Dr. Rivers considers
that sensorial imagery is much more vivid in savage peoples than
in civilised, even going so far as to speak of their “almost ex-
clusive interest in the concrete”, and suggests that the prominence
of this feature in the primitive mind accounts for the strikingly
dramatic nature of most of their rites and ceremonies, as it does
in the case of dreams. His chief departure, and an ominous one,
from the views held by psycho-analysts, concerns the importance
of sex. He holds that “the emotions based on the instinct of self-
preservation take a far more important place as motives for rite
and custom”, and, indeed, that “there is reason to suppose that
when sexual motives are found in apparently primitive culture,
they are the result of an influence from without, a product perhaps
of degeneration rather than a sign of infancy”. The question of
how greatly primitive races differ from civilised ones is a much
disputed one, but we had never suspected that the difference
could be so great as this seems to indicate. If it is true it may
explain why the sexual life of savages is passed over so hurriedly
in most works of description, but we had always supposed that
there were other reasons for this. :
Dr. Rivers, the President of the Royal Anthropological Institute
and of the Folk-Lore Society, is the first eminent ethnologist to
display a serious interest in psycho-analysis, and he is to be con-
gratulated on the beginning he has made.
Ee. J.
*
Macic in Names. By Edward Clodd, (Chapman & Hall, London,
1920. Pp. 238. Price 12s. 6d.).
It can be said at once of this book that it should be in every
psycho-analytical library. It is an exceedingly valuable collection
BOOK REVIEWS 335
of material, well ordered and clearly expounded. The author wisely
confines himself mainly to the presentation of this material, adding
but little in the way of comment or explanation.
He begins with a description of the wide-spread belief in mana,
in the power of influencing the world by non-natural processes,
one probably identical with what in psycho-analysis is termed
“the belief in the omnipotence of thought” (Afmadtr der Gee
danken). How astonished anthropologists would be to know what
a mana-like attitude is shown by the unconscious mind of the
normal civilised adult!
The author describes how this belief is attached, first to con-
crete parts of the person such as the blood, hair, teeth, saliva,
_ and so on, then to less material objects like the portrait, shadow,
reflection, echo, and so leads up to the main theme of his
work, the ideas and feelings of magic attaching to names of all
sorts. This is subdivided into sections on personal names, names
of relatives, birth names, initiation names,; euphemisms, names
of kings and priests, names of the dead, and names of gods. It
becomes clear that the primitive mind attaches a perfectly extra-
ordinary significance to names, and treats them on the one hand
as concrete things in themselves and on the other as integral
representatives of the personality. The belief, for instance, that
it is safer to conceal one’s name, and that possession of it by an
enemy gives him complete power over one, is to be met with in
all parts of the world. The author, whose life’s work has lain in
anthropology and folk-lore, confines himself, it is true, mainly to
savage races and peasants, but illustrations could be drawn from
the most sophisticated classes and nations: he might, for instance,
have commented on the dread thrill that passes through our House
of Commons when the Speaker, on desperate occasions, has
recourse to the last resort of threatening to “name” the recalcitrant
member, one that rarely fails in its aim! It is thus far from true
to say, as Mr. Clodd does, that “to the civilized man, his name
is only a necessary label”. Every medical practitioner knows that
in a case of unconsciousness the patient’s own name is the last
sound to which he will fail to respond, and through Stekel’s work
on Namenverpflihtung we know to what an extraordinary extent
a person’s character and interests can be unconsciously influenced
by the meaning of his name.
1 See, for instance, Dr. Oberndorf’s paper on page 223 above.
336 BOOK REVIEWS
We see thus yet another field waiting to be fertilised by psycho-
analysis, and in the meantime are grateful to Mr. Clodd tor grouping
the necessary material in such a useful and presentable form.
EJ.
*K
RELIGION aND Cutture. A Critical Survey of Methods of Approach
to Religious Phenomena. By Frederick Schleiter, (Columbia Uni-
versity Press, New York, 1919. Pp. 193 and Bibliography).
As the title indicates, this volume is intended rather as a critical
review than as an original contribution to this extensive subject,
one covered by such terms as comparative religion, social psycho-
logy, anthropology and ethnology. The author is mainly concerned with
the difficult question of methodology; he discusses the criteria we
possess for the interpretation of anthropological data, the principles
underlying the various modes of approach, and the most suitable
starting points for investigation. These are very complex problems,
which can only be discussed in an appropriate place and at con-
siderable length, so that the reviewer will confine himself here to
giving his impression of the book as a whole.
One feels that the author, doubtless in the endeavour to be
objective, has refrained too much from constructive criticism of
the methods he deals with, so that the book consists too much
of a series of quotations of one theory and method after another,
and fails to present the organic relations between them in an
imaginative way. It serves the purpose excellently well of orienting
students as to the main trends of work in these fields, and pro-
vides a useful and well-chosen bibliography. That his presentation
of these, however, is not always to be depended on may be
illustrated to the readers of this Journal familiar with the dynamic
psychology of Freud, by the following passage, where they will
be astonished to read that Freud “considers that they (7 e. the
traditional principles of associationism—contiguity in space and
time, cause and effect, and similarity) constitute a Satisfactory ex-
planation of the juxtaposition of psychic content involved in magic.
The support of this position by Freud is nothing short of a curious
anachronism”. As it is mainly Freud’s work which has made such
a position an anachronism, the comment is distinctly entertaining.
The absurdity of a further passage “Freud states that he was led
BOOK REVIEWS 337
to the use of the term ‘Afmadt der Gedanken’ by means of
the psycho-analysis of a man who seemed to possess it in a striking
way” may be due merely to careless writing, but the author’s grasp
of the subject is not such as to encourage one to give him the
benefit of the doubt on the point. The usefulness of the book
is unfortunately marred by its being written in a barbarous
German-American which makes it very trying to read.
E. J.
*
Tue Ixprvipvat Detixquent. A Text-book of Diagnosis and Pro-
gnosis for all concerned in understanding Offenders. By William
Healy, B.A., M.D, (Heinemann, London. Pp. 830. Price 21s. net.).
Although this book purports to deal with the subject of crimi-
nology in general its main concern is with juvenile delinquency.
This is probably due to two considerations: a personal one, that
the author has had his attention specially directed to this aspect
of criminology through having spent the last five years as Director
of the Psychopathic Institute at the Juvenile Court, Chicago; the
other a wider one, namely, that anyone who, like the author,
makes a scientific study of criminology must soon see that the
main problems, particularly the all-important ones of genesis, relate
to childhgod and its development.
The volume is divided into two books. In the first, entitled
“General Data”, there are four preliminary chapters, then four on
“working methods” and statistics, with two on general conclusions
as to treatment. The methods of investigation described are
especially fully dealt with, and this section is exceedingly valuable.
The second book, entitled “Cases, Types, Causative Factors”, com-
prises the larger part of the whole volume. The questions of here-
dity, antenatal and natal factors, and physical abnormalities in de-
velopment are first discussed. Then follow a number of chapters
on psychological factors, environmental and intrinsic; the subjects of
mental conflicts and “repressions” are considered at length, special
stress being laid on the all-important matter of sexual develop-
ment and experiences. There are several chapters on the various
kinds of mental deficiency and inferiority, ranging from dulness to
actual idiocy. The influence of epilepsy and alcoholism is discussed,
and an interesting account given of special mental peculiarities,
22%
338 BOOK REVIEWS
such as pathological lying, love of excitement, abnormal social
suggestibility, etc. An imposing bibliography and a full index con-
clude the volume.
The book is one of a series dealing with different aspects of
criminology, and it is quite one of the best of the series. It will,
indeed, easily take rank as one of the few works on the subject
that really count. The author’s enthusiasm, erudition, and level jud-
gement are stamped on every page. His views, though very
sympathetic, err, if at all, on the conservative side, and his special
talents are rather social than psychological. But, as the reviewer knows
from first-hand experience, he has been at the centre of the band
of devoted workers that in the past few years have revolutionised
the treatment of juvenile delinquents in Chicago, and his influence
has radiated over the whole of the United States. A work of this
extent from his hand, therefore, is one that will necessarily arouse
the strongest interest on the part of all those who have to deal with
such problems. — E..J.
PRrosiems or SusNorma tity. By J. E. Wallace Wallin, (World Book
Co., New York, 1917. Pp. 285.).
This volume is concerned with the problems of the feeble-
minded, the group between normal children on the one hand and
imbeciles on the other. It is divided essentially into four parts
dealing respectively with: the exact diagnosis of the presence and
degree of feeble-mindedness, the differential modes of education
needed for such children, the questions of after-care and the use
to which the feeble-minded can be put, and the social and pre-
ventive problems concerned. In addition there are chapters on the
general question of the changing attitude towards the feeble-minded,
epilepsy, State provision for defective children, and the hygiene
of eugenic generation.
The most valuable portions of the book would seem to be the
first section, which gives an interestingly written historical review
of the development of our knowledge on the subject, and the
second one, dealing with the problems of psychological diagnosis.
Wallin rightly insists that this diagnosis and exact grading can
only be made by specially trained experts. “A few years ago the
assumption was made that practically any intelligent person could
BOOK REVIEWS 339
determine whether or not a child or adult was feeble-minded by
a few minutes examination by means of the Binet-Simon scale,
with the aid of certain arbitrary quantitative standards of mental
retardation”, whereas “it is not probable that it (this assumption)
is now entertained by any considerable number of clinical psycho-
logists”. He gives a detailed and convincing criticism of the fallacies
of the Binet-Simon scale, though he omits to mention what in the
reviewer's opinion is the chief one—namely, that it makes no allow-
ance for the varying affective, and often unconscious, attitude of
different children towards the individual tasks comprising the exa-
mination. Wallin’s own methods of examination lead him to define
feeble-mindedness in a much narrower sense than is usually done,
particularly in its upward direction, and he would not class any
child as being feeble-minded or as needing special education unless
there was reason to conclude that in the future he would not be
able to earn his living independently.
The chapter on epilepsy is conventionally written, and the only
contribution it makes is the description given of the characteristic
reactions of the epileptic child to various intelligence tests. Most
noteworthy is the omission of any account of Pierce Clark’s re-
cent remarkable work on the psychology of epilepsy. Indeed, one
notes throughout an unfortunate failure to take advantage of the
medical work done in the allied field of the neuroses.
Wallin has an unusually rich experience of most of the problems
directly concerning feeble-minded children, and his book contains
a mass of detailed and original observations and statistics. For
those working in this field the book will be of very great value,
but it is too diffusely written and too voluminous to be of much
service to non-specialists. B,J.
NOTES
A Washington Psychoanalytic Society has been inaugurated,
under the Presidency of Dr. William A. White.
In the current session Mr. J. C. Fligel delivered a course of
ten lectures on Psycho-Analysis as part of the regular course in
Psychology at University College, University of London. This is
the first time that the subject has received official recognition in
any University in England.
In October and November Mr. Cyril Burt delivered ten lectures
on “Psycho-Analysis and Education” as part of the courses orga-
nised for the teachers of the London County Council Education
Department. The enrolment had to be limited to 200, for lack of
further accomodation.
On October 13th. Professor A. G. Tansley, University of Cam-
bridge, gave an address on “Freud’s Theory of Sex considered
from the Biological Standpoint” before the British Society for
the Study of Sex-Psychology. The speaker expressed his opinion
that the theory was throughout well founded biologically.
On January the 7th. 1921 Dr. S. Herbert of Manchester addressed
the same Society on the subject of “Sex and the Unconscious”,
speaking entirely from the psycho-analytical point of view.
On February the 2nd. 1921 Dr. Ernest Jones gave an address on
“Some Unconscious Mental Mechanisms” before the University of
London Psychological Society.
At the examination in Psychology for the Cambridge Diploma
of Psychological Medicine, October 1920, two of the six questions
were on Psycho-Analysis.
In July 1920 a Discussion on Psychotherapy took place before
the Section of Neurology and Psychiatry of the British Medical
Association. Psycho-Analysis was not well represented there, and
the meeting was chiefly noteworthy for a violent diatribe against
it on the part of Dr. Gordon Holmes.
There was a Discussion on Psychotherapy at the Australasian
Medical Congress held in Brisbane, 1920. Papers were read on treat-
340
NOTES 341
ment of the war neuroses by Drs. Godfrey, Rowden White, Garnet
Leary, and Ralph Noble, describing the methods in use in England,
and dealing largely with psycho-analysis.
The Prescriber devoted a special number in December to
Psycho-Analysis. The main articles were by Dr. Henry Somerville and
Mr. Cecil Owen. The editorial article insists strongly on the necessity
of practitioners acquiring at least some knowledge of the subject.
In December and January there appeared in several London
newspapers a flood of articles and letters purporting to refer to
Psycho-Analysis. The general tone was that of alarmed denunciation
of the occult and immoral tendencies supposed to be associated
with it. The only facts cited were that some persons advertise in
occult magazines pretending to employ Psycho-Analysis, whereupon
the fear was vividly expressed that they might, telepathically or
otherwise, obtain access to personal secrets and exploit these from
either sexual or mercenary motives. After a while it became re-
cognised in the better-class papers that these alleged practices,
which by the way there is no reason to think had ever taken
place, had nothing to do with Psycho-Analysis itself, and emphasis
was laid on this obvious consideration in a leading article of the
British Medical Journal of January the 22nd. entitled “Quack Psycho-
Analysis”.
OBITUARY
We regret to have to announce the loss through death of one
of the members of the British Psycho-Analytical Society, Colonel
W. D. Sutherland, I. M. S. Though his life’s work lay in other
fields, those of medical jurisprudence, pathology, and bacteriology,
he took a very considerable interest in the more human aspects
of psychology. He had a remarkable knowledge of Indian Folk-
Lore and made a number of contributions to Krauss’s Anthropo-
phyteia. He never practised psycho-analysis, but always took a
lively interest in the subject and maintained a regular corres-
pondence on it with several of its exponents. In 1911 he visited
Professor Freud in Vienna and in 1920 was present at one of the
meetings of the British Psycho-Analytical Society, of which he was
one of the original members.
We regret also to announce the death of Dr. Skevirsky of New
York, a member of the New York Psychoanalytic Society.
REPORTS OF THE INTERNATIONAL PSYCHO-
ANALYTICAL ASSOCIATION
ABSTRACTS OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE SIXTH INTERNATIONAL
PSYCHO-ANALYTICAL CONGRESS
Held at The Hague, September 8th to 12th., 1920,
Dr. K. Asranam, Berlin. Forms of Expression of the Female
Castration Complex.
There are various possible outcomes of the female castration
complex. The normal or cultural form, as Freud calls it, is that
the woman is reconciled to her femininity; the desire to possess
a male genital organ is given up and in its place appears the wish
to have a child (really as a gift from her father). This enables the
woman to obtain gratification from the female sexual réle and to
develop maternal feelings.
The ambivalent (archaic) attitude is opposed to this outcome.
Besides the love for the man to whom she at first belonged, the
woman produces feelings of hate in connection with her defloration,
because the injury to her physical integrity re-awakens the castration
complex. Traces of this form of reaction can still be observed in
civilised conditions.
A third outcome is the turning to homosexuality. This possi-
bility is based on the bisexual disposition of human beings. In
some of the cases the homosexuality is principally expressed in a
sublimated form.
The neurotic outcomes, which are bile the object of this
paper, are extremely multiform, and many of them up to the present
have hardly been noticed.
These neurotic symptoms partly express cit wish to be male
and partly are directed against the man in the sense of revenge
(castration, killing). A number of symptoms and dreams, which
agree in content with the symptoms, were discussed. In those
mentioned first the patient unconsciously plays the male réle or
she expects to become male. Certain of the neurotic symptoms
342
REPORTS | 348
%
w
manifest themselves in parts of the body, which are made use of
as surrogates for the male genital. Other symptoms represent the
complete refusal of the male, but at the same time they have an
active castration purpose (vaginismus, etc.); or they contain a dread
of such an action. Again other symptoms serve for the disparage-
ment or disappointment of the man.
Certain women, who can only accustom themselves with great
difficulty to the disadvantage with which they were born, under
no circumstances wish to be reminded of the painful thing, they
avoid with over-sensitiveness anything that could have this effect.
Horror of wounds is a particularly marked symptom of this kind
(wound = female genital).
The tendency to compromise formation is also met with here
as throughout in the psychology of the neuroses. Many women are
quite satisfied in their female réle provided they are the most
beautiful and most desired of all others, or if a man who puts all
other men in the shade as regards manliness desire them. Another
expression of the female castration complex is that the man in
his male (that is to say genital) function is acknowledged, only her
own genital is withdrawn from use and the libido is displaced to
the oral or anal zone. Then perversions or conversion phenomena
take place in connection with these erotogenic zones.
Women with such an attitude transplant their castration com-
plex to their children. They make it more difficult for girls to
accept their femininity, and they permanently injure the boy’s
narcissistic pride in manliness. The castration complex in the
mother, in particular her anal-erotism, is an important factor
aetiologically as regards the pathological expressions of the castration
complex in the children. The treatment of the woman therefore
offers a possibility of guarding the descendents against the risk of
a neurosis; here lies a particularly fruitful field of work for psycho-
analysis.
se)
Dr. Hetene Devurscu, Vienna. On the Psychology of Su-
spicion.
The lecturer deals with the psychic mechanisms of suspicion
as a neurotic symptom, as a character trait, as a psychic pheno-
menon in deafness, and as a phenomenon of mass psychology.
344 REPORTS
The conduct of the suspicious person towards his environment
shows that he is in constant expectancy of a hostile attack, and
that he seeks to protect himself from this. Since this danger
threatening him is not real, or observed in the external world,
psycho-analysis considers that it has its origin in the unconscious.
The mechanisms concerned with suspicion as a pathological symptom
are discussed in four analysed cases. In the first case the suspicion
corresponded with the projection of the endopsychic perception
of an impulse of danger threatening the ego from the unconscious.
Allusion was made to certain analogies between this mechanism
of projection and the mechanism acting in anxiety hysteria.
In the second case the symptom was explained by the conflict
of ambivalency, in that the suspicion represented the projection
of repressed hate tendencies into the external world. The relations
existing between suspicion and doubt were discussed.
The suspicion in the third case had its cause in the continual
oscillation of the libido between heterosexual and homosexual
object choice. This psychic formation showed that every attempt
at object choice was accompanied by strong negative tendencies.
The endopsychic perception of tendencies hostile to the ego of
homosexual and incestuous love was projected externally, likewise
hate directed against the woman or the man succumbed to pro-
jection and was apperceived as suspicion.
The fourth case, a beginning paranoia, showed great suspicion
before the outbreak of the psychosis, in which nevertheless hysterical
mechanisms could be demonstrated. The relations of suspicion to
paranoia were discussed with especial reference to the differences
and analogies.
Suspicion makes use of projection like the delusion of perse-
cution, but in distinction from paranoia it does not always have
homosexuality as its basis; also there is lacking the characteristic
change of affect seen in paranoia. .
In the origin of suspicion as a character trait the same me-
chanisms of projection hold good, the endopsychic perception of
an impulse of danger, with the exception that here the individual
has definitely freed himself from the danger in this manner. The
constitutional strengthening of the anal-sadistic impulses offers
particularly favourable conditions for the origin of suspicion, whereby
one’s own hostility is projected externally and Reverie the feeling
of the threatening danger.
REPORTS 345
In the origin of suspicion in deafness it is assumed that the
strengthening of the sadism present in everybody comes about
through the. weakening of the ego; also human beings apparently
need the control of all their senses in order to resist the feeling
of uncertainty in the external world arising from their own
hostility.
It was also noted that suspicion after the war had become
-a general phenomenon, and this goes back to the sadism
released through the war, of which Suspicion forms the last
trace.
Another important cause of suspicion is seen in the disappoint-
ments which the child has experienced in his first love objects.
These disappointments leave behind the scar which contributes to
the deformity of character in the sense of suspicion, or under
suitable conditions can lead to the appearance of this symptom in
the neuroses.
*
Dr. A. Srircxe, Den Dolder, Holland. The Castration
Complex.
The Castration Complex is one part of a disposition towards
ambivalency, the other part of which—namely, wishes and tendencies
of various kinds and the infantile theory of the woman with the
penis—shows the same origin.
The infant acquires this disposition towards ambivalency while
sucking at the mother’s breast or the bottle; the excremental
functions are also factors concerned, as has been described by
Prof. Freud, and perhaps the act of divesting the infant of *other
things, as for instance clothes, may play a part.
Attention is directed towards deviations from the normal
nursing, as these must exercise an influence on the budding psyche
which cannot be overrated. It is suggested that the pains the
mother suffers while nursing may be of importance for arousing
or fixing sadistic tendencies, and also that the situation at the
breast introduces the process of projection The nipple in the
baby’s mouth is, in accordance with his degree of development
a part of his own body. The withdrawing of the nipple and the
excremental functions engender the first traces of the conception
of a separate outer world. The wish to reunite the Ego and the
346 REPORTS
fi
outer world, a desire which is equated with the striving after
happiness, means the wishing of the sucking situation back again.
The formation of the outer world is the original castration; the
withdrawal of the nipple forms the root-conception of this.
*
Dr. v. Hatrtincperc, Munich. Transference and Object Choice;
their Significance as regards the Theory of Instinct.
The theory of transference like that of object choice is based
on the idea that feeling and impulse are independent of their
object. This statement of Freud, in support of which are brought
forward many examples from the instinctive life of animals, is a
central point for the whole theory of instinct. From the various
possible conceptions of instinctive actions are eliminated all those
that consider the object as essential for the instinct, whether as
a stimulus as in the Tropism theory and the reflex theory of
the instincts, or as aim or idea of purpose as in the psychology
of consciousness. There remain only two possible conceptions, one
that claims a condition of the individual himself as point of re-
lation as regards “direction”, the essential thing in instinctive
actions. Instinct actions are alterations of the entire conduct which
appear in typical situations. They are connections of functions and
alterations of functions which originate in a typical initial state ot
the individual (craving) and which lead to a typical final state
(gratification). Impulses are then directions of such sources. The
second point of view is the dynamic one. Its value for represen-
tation is undoubtedly very great if the instinct occurrence is to be
described in itself and in its various forms. It fails in the presence
of the multiplicity of the instinct life in its various directions.
Every dynamic conception compels us to assume necessarily a
single force, that of “a libido” (Jung’s desexualised libido). If,
however, it is the same libido that is expressed in all instincts,
then a more precise definition of its particular direction becomes
necessary, if we wish to understand not only that there is sucha
thing as once hating, once loving, but also that hostile tendencies
may be expressed in friendly actions. If affects and impulses are
not directed by means of ideas, but on the contrary, ideas by
affects and impulses, if therefore impulses determine the direction
REPORTS 347
of the course of the association, then they must above all be
characterised by means of a particular direction. This, however,
can be represented better through the reference to the final con-
ditions typical for each part than through the libido theory that
refers everything to the fundamental comparison of a fluid.
*
_ J. C.Fricer, B.A. London. On the Biological Basis of Sexual
Repression.
The psychological contrast that is expressed in sexual repression
may be considered as a special case of a more general biological
contrast.
This contrast permits of two points of view that are closely
related to one another. 1. The psychological. There necessarily
exists a reverse relation between the degree of higher organisation
and activity of the individual organism on the one hand and of
its reproductive energy on the other. 2. The economic. In con-
sequence of the limited quantity of available nourishment a high
level of the individual life results in the control of the number
of individual beings, and thereby of the tendencies of repro-
7
duction.
Natural selection determined in the course of development the
relation of the energy made use of for individuation and for
genesis. In the main, development has brought with it a continual
increase of individuation at the cost of genesis; nevertheless there
are important influences that have made the advance in that direction
slow and difficult. .
In mental life the contrast between sexuality and work
(sublimation) corresponds with this biological contrast between
genesis and individuation.
The sexual impulses up to a certain degree represent an older
and more primitive form of the forces of life. Mankind is con-
stantly endeavouring to adapt itself to a condition in which
sublimation plays a greater and the sexual impulses a lesser part.
However, at present a very serious “disharmony” exists in this
respect, since the sexual impulses of the human being absorb a
greater portion of their entire energy than their present environment
requires.
348 REPORTS
The relation between sexuality and sublimation (that is to say
between the psychological aspects of genesis and individuation) is
complicated; the same energy is in the last instance made use
of for both, so that there is no adequate sublimation without strong
libido. Further complications arise through certain factors which
render necessary the utilising of certain portions of libidinous energy
for sexual purposes throughout life: 1. The actual necessity of re-
production. 2. The slow and gradual construction of the sublimation
process. 3. Definite relations between sexual and individual de-
velopment, in consequence of which a satisfactory adaptation to
the non-sexual sides of existence is impossible, as long as a cor-
responding degree of sexual development is lacking.
The physiological and biological method of consideration of the
contrasts between individuation and genesis can only be applied
directly in regard to the sexual impulses in so far as these stand
in the service of reproduction, but from the psychological point of
view the contrast is expressed also in reference to elements of
sexuality not serving reproduction, since their energy stands in re-
verse relationship to the energy given up to sublimation. Never-
theless the allo-erotic elements succumb in many respects to a
greater degree of repression than the auto-erotic ones, with the
result that the latter become strengthened at the cost of the former.
The higher stages of individuation are closely bound up with
the process of socialisation. It seems therefore that the sexual re-
pression up to a certain degree can be traced back to the influence
of social forces. .
A certain degree of inhibition seems to have become a part ot
the human sexual instinct. Two important factors are distinguishable.
1. The fact that a strong sexual repression cannot be overcome at
once, but only slowly and gradually. 2. The secondary gain of
pleasure that can be obtained through the relief of greater tension
which repression brings with it.
The general recognition of the facts that are associated with
the biological aspect of sexual repression would considerably con-
tribute in removing the greatest difficulties of human existence, as
well in the psychological sphere (the sexual conflict) as in the
economic sphere (the relation of population to the means of
subsistence).
REPORTS ! 349
Pror. G. JeLcersma, Leyden. A Psycho-Analytical Contribution
to the Theory of Feeling.
So far psycho-analysis has supplied few contributions to the
theory of feeling. Freud has briefly alluded to it in a work on a
different subject, otherwise there is nothing to be found. The
investigation of the theory of feeling has a large place in the
scientific psychological literature. |
However, psycho-analysis can also render valuable contributions.
The lecturer gave a short sketch of his theory which approximated
to that of Ebbinghaus, and he explained his views from the symptoms
of the transference neuroses and schizophrenia.
*
Dr. Hanns Sacus, Vienna. Day-Dreams in Common.
That the day-dream is a preliminary stage of poetry is one ot
the most familiar statements of psycho-analysis. So far it has
remained unexplained where one is to look for the cause of the
transition from the strict egocentric day-dream, bound to no
formal principle, to the work of art that renders enjoyment possible
to outsiders through the force of attraction of the aesthetic form.
One had to be satisfied with the psychologically inaccessible factor
of the hereditary disposition.
As a stage of transition between day-dream and poetry the
“day-dreams in common” come into consideration in which two
or more persons cooperate, therefore giving up the limitation to
the closest ego-interests. The analysis of two such cases showed
that it was a common feeling of guilt that sought relief and found
it in the working out of the day-dream, since in it lay an un-
conscious admission of the same guilt of the other party. The
feeling of guilt caused the individual personality to appear less
prominently in the foreground.
That is the root in the day-dreams in common that in the
work of art is the aim unconsciously striven for. The artistic
illusion does not rest on deception of the senses, but in the fact
that the receptive person experiences also the affects of the work
— consciously as well as unconsciously. If the poet achieves this
illusion, that is to say, if he succeeds in getting the public to
regard his work as a work of art, then the public says to him:
350 REPORTS
“Yes, your forbidden wishes are ours; we desire the same.as you
desire and have carried out in phantasy”; the public therefore
declares itself as being guilty and softens the artist's feeling
of guilt.
The artist’s own person has to step into the background for
the sake of the effect of his work. The narcissism sacrificed
thereby is displaced from the author to the work—an ideal fragment
of his self—and returns as beauty of form. In this round-about
way the narcissism returns to its original gratification, for the
artist now finds personal recognition and interest which. otherwise
remained denied to the man of phantasy who keeps aloof from
action. | |
It is a postulate of psycho-analysis that at the basis of every
great advance of civilisation must lie the repetition of the primitive
crime. This postulate is fulfilled by the above sketched hypothesis.
The day-dream as we know, is built up, in the last instance on
the CEdipus complex. The day-dreamer by yielding to his phantasies
repeats the primitive crime—but alone, and this is an offence
against the oldest law of mankind, according to which this may
be committed only by the whole community of brothers acting
together. The artist finds the way from the insupportable isolation
to the brothers and their common guilt.
*
Dr. Txeopor Rem, Vienna. The strange god and one’s own
god.
The lecturer began with the point that strange deities and their
cult frequently give an uncanny impression. He endeavoured to
explain this effect through the continuity of animistic convictions
and for comparison drew parallel cases from the symptomatology
of the obsessional neuroses. The history of religions gives the
final explanation of these peculiar reactions of feelings. The
henotheism of the brother clan knew only one god; through the
differentiation and local dissemination of mankind it happened that
each clan had its own god which was equal to that of the other
clan, and like that one was represented as active and effective.
It was only later that the identity of the strange god and one’s
own god was no longer recognised. The strange god appeared as
REPORTS 351
a caricatured double of one’s own god through the advance of
civilisation of the one tribe and the falling back of another. The
uncanniness is therefore brought about by means of a returning
to individual phases in the developmental history of mankind. As
a second source of the feeling of uncanniness was cited the
excitation of feelings from analogy with the infantile complexes
arising out of impressions and occurrences of primaeval history. The
uncanniness arising from the primary complexes in the history of
mankind proves to be more obstinate than that connected with
overcome complexes. Here for example belong the castration and
incest complexes, as well as’ those feelings originating from the
repressed revolutionary impulses. The pre-existence of the guilty
conscience towards one’s own god is a determinant for religious
persecution (Jewish pogroms, Armenian massacres). The strange
god was once one’s own god that was alienated from the masses
through the pressure of development and advance of civilisation,
and which appears in its cruder and more primitive form now as
uncanny.
*
Dr. Giza Rouem, Budapest. Central Australian Totemism.
Alcheringa as dream period. A primitive phase of totemism,
as pure wish-fulfilment, is reflected in the traditions of the. Arunta.
Eating of the totem and totemistic incest. The Inapertwa as mythical
embryos, the Alcheringa hero as a projection of the omnipotence
in the mother’s body on to the father’s image.
The ignorance of procreation on the part of the Arunta: a crucial
question of social anthropology and an experiment for the psycho-
analytic methods of investigation. Unconscious sexual knowledge
that is shown in myths concerning procreation. Eating as a marriage
ceremony and as cause of pregnancy. The boomerang in the myths
of procreation and love magic as penis. The pre-natal single
combat with the father as a cause of birth. In other words, every
birth is unconsciously traced back to incest. The cause of the
ignorance of the Arunta is repression. This is directed against
sexuality in general, because this is unconsciously identified with
the CEdipus complex. The centre of the totem as projection of
the body of the mother into the external world. The Churinga as
“another body” or “external soul”—a symbol of.tthe embryo in
23
352 REPORTS
the body of the mother; on account of this is ascribed to it the
procreation of children. (As already noted the Churinga also
signifies the penis). The Arunta theory of the procreation of
children is an unconscious infantile. wish fulfilment; through it
the child becomes its own father and supernatural husband of
the mother.
The ceremonial of the Central Australian totemism, the Intichiuma
rites. Their performance at the approach of the time of general
fruitfulness in nature figures in the traditions as representation and
equivalent of coition. The magic (procreation)’ and imitative
element in the Intichiuma is analysed. The anthropic significance
of the Intichiuma is the Alcheringa: original aim the propagation
of human not animal members of the totem clan. Intichiumas of
the totem of children. The Intichiuma is the continuation of a pre-
human rutting period. Young men as spectators in the Intichiuma
instead of women: the commencement of repression and homo-
erotic element in the Intichiuma. The rutting period is also the
time of combat: the struggle between young and old males must
have taken place in the rutting period. The eating of the totem
as a propagation rite is a symbol of the rebellion, but also a symbol
of the compact between young and old males. The connection
between the origin of repression and the disappearance of the
ruttings periods. Repression originally directed against the G-dipus
complex. An attempt to determine the phase of development that
is represented in the Intichiuma. Continuation of the analysis of
the procreation rites. The beating of the rock of the Alcheringa
hero, a symbolic repetition of the father murder. Unconscious
association between parricide and procreation, since each sexual
intercourse occurs with the mother it cannot be completed without
first killing the father. Tearing to pieces and procreation: parallel
characteristics in initiation rites. The ego and the libido both add
their contribution to the development of the Intichiuma rites.
K
Dr. Ernst Simmet, Berlin, Psycho-Analysis of the Gambler.
The treatment of a young man, who in consequence of his
passion for gambling was in danger of complete demoralisation
and who had several times been in conflict with the police and
REPORTS 353,
had been sentenced to imprisonment, gave, besides the cure that
resulted, a characteristic insight into the genesis and unconscious
structure of the passion for gambling itself.
It serves the unfolding or the substitute formation of the
exceedingly active pre-genital anal-sadistic libido in the un-
conscious. :
The fortune gained and lost at play proved to be much over-
determined.
The insatiable inordinate desire that will not rest in the endless
vicious circle until the loss becomes gain and the gain once more
loss, originates in the narcissistic desire of the anal birth phan-
tasies, to fructify himself, to devour his own excrement, gold, and
to give birth to himself out of himselt in immeasurable increase,
replacing and surpassing his father and mother. The passion for
gambling therefore gratifies ultimately the inclination for the bi-
sexual idea, which the narcissist finds in himself; it serves the
compromise formed of man and woman — active and passive —
sadism and masochism — and finally the unsettled decision
between genital and anal libido, for which the gambler battles
in the well known colour symbol, “rouge et noir’. The
passion for gambling thus serves auto-erotic gratification, whereby
the playing is fore-pleasure, the gaining orgasm, and the loss
ejaculation, defecation and castration.
In a brief survey of the historical development of games of
chance it was shown that in the individual development of the
gamester is repeated, as it were ontogenetically, the phylogenetic
formation of the game of chance; that is to say, that on the deve-
lopmental path of mankind games of chance are a reservoir for
the anal-sadistic impulses held in the state of repression.
In conclusion a brief retrospect concerning the psychogenesis
of the criminality of the patient was given; and, proceeding from
the well known impulse of the criminal to defecate at the place
of his misdeed, it was pointed out that the anal-sadistic impulses
were effective here in the same sense, whereby the narcissist who
is rejected and avoided by the father becomes “Herostratus”. It is
then no longer the CEdipus complex of the perpetrator that de-
termines the tendency to criminality, but the Laios complex of the
revenging and punishing father and his imagines, for example, the
public prosecutor.
x
354 REPORTS
Pror. Sicm. Freup, Vienna. Supplements to the Theory of
Dreams. :
The lecturer in his brief remarks dealt with three points in
the theory of dreams. The first two concerned the theory that the
dream is a wish-fulfilment, and certain modifications of this were
advanced; the third point referred to a complete corroboration of
his rejection of the so-called prospective tendency of the dream.
It was put forward that one had grounds for recognising, besides
the well-known wish and anxiety dreams which lent themselves
easily to the theory, a third category which he called “punishment
dreams”. If one takes into consideration the justified assumption
of a special self-observing critical factor in the ego (ego-ideal,
censorship, conscience) then these punishment dreams are also to
be subsumed under the wish-fulfilment theory, since they represent
the wish-fulfilment of this criticising factor. They have the same
relation to the ordinary wish dreams as the symptoms that have
arisen from reaction formations in the obsessional neuroses have
to hysterical symptoms. A more serious exception to the rule that
‘tthe dream is a wish-fulfilment is found in the so-called “traumatic”
dreams, as found in patients after accidents, or in the
reproductions of forgotten psychic traumata of childhood
in the psycho-analysis of neurotics. In reference to their
connection with the wish-fulfilment theory, allusion was made
to a work soon to be published called “Jenseits des Lust-
prinzips”.
The mention of an unpublished investigation of Dr. Varendonck
of Ghent formed the third point. Varendonck had found that he
was able to bring in a great measure to his conscious observation
the unconscious phantasying when half-asleep (called by him
“autistic thinking”), It was established that the seeing beforehand
of the possibilities of the next day, the preparation of attempts at
solution and adaptation, etc., fall quite within the realm of the
pre-conscious activity, which produces the latent dream thoughts
and as the lecturer had always maintained has nothing to do with
the dream work.
%
Dr. S. Ferenczi, Budapest. Further Extension of the Active
Technique in Psycho-Analysis,
*
REPORTS 355
“Active technique” is only a new name for something that
has been constantly used in psycho-analysis. The cathartic therapy
was pronouncedly active; the Freudian psycho-analysis demands
from the doctor and the patient before everything else a passive
giving up to free associations. But the interpretation is already an
active interference on the part of the doctor. The only activity
that we hitherto demanded from the patient was the overcoming
of resistances to ideas. Another kind of activity was used in certain
cases of hysterical phobias. The patients were urged to re-experience
the situation causing the phobia and anxiety and this resulted in
advancing the analysis (reminiscences, etc.). According to Freud
the chief rule of the activity is that the cure has to be carried
through in abstinence. In many cases the activity was used inthe
form of orders and prohibitions, always against the direction of
pleasure. He caused the patients to seek situations that produced
discomfort; finally when they became pleasurable to them they
were prohibited. The therapeutic effect in ae further associa-
tions was striking: .
The indication for the active technique is limited to certain
exceptional cases, or to those showing stoppages in the analysis,
and its method of use was separately discussed in particular neu-
roses, character analyses, and at the end of the psycho-analytic
cures. In conclusion attention was drawn to the difference between
this activity and the therapeutic measures of others (Jung, Adler,
Bjerre), and an attempt was made to construct the theoretical bases
of this technique. |
*
Eucenza Soxortnicxa, Warsaw. On the Diagnosis and Symp-
tomatology of the Psycho-Analytical Theory of the Neuroses.
Comparison between the pre-analytic and analytic diagnosis
and' symptomatology. A case was discussed which appeared
particularly to justify such a comparison. The significance
of the correct diagnosis for the therapy of the functional neu-
roses.
A brief survey of the method of how the diagnosis and symto-
matology was carried out before psycho-analysis. As an example:
Hysteria and the so-called neurasthenia, The earlier theories of
the neuroses. Uniformity of the remedies applied. Criticism of the
356 REPORTS
concepts on which the earlier functional theory of the neuroses was
founded. Want of precise psychological concepts. — :
Freud’s theories of instinct. Creation of a new psychology that
does not rest on the artificial analyses of the laboratory, but investi-
gates the elementary phenomena of the mind in its work in reality.
Creation of newer concepts on which can be founded the new
diagnosis and symptomatology. Transferring of the main impor-
tance to the investigation of the ontogenesis instead of as previously |
phylogenesis (heredity). Creation of objective psychological methods
of investigation for the functional neuroses in place of the earlier
apparently exact physical ones. Therefore for the petty description
of separate symptoms is substituted an extremely fine shading of
diagnosis and symptomatology, which enables one to see into the
structure of the patient’s mind.
Three examples that show the difficulties of an imm sitlakely
correct and complete diagnosis in many cases, and at the same
time the solution of these difficulties by means of psycho-analysis.
Borderline cases with symptoms not quite defined in the earlier
sense, are made clear and also capable of cure by psycho-analysis.
Example. An analysis is from beginning to end the progressive
uncovering and interpretation of symptoms. Examples. The new
conception of the word “symptom”. Character as a symptom. An
example that can serve as a contribution to the question of the
réle of the ego impulses in the formation of symptoms.
General conclusions from the material. Theoretical and practical
value of the new views arrived at through analysis concerning
symptomatology and diagnosis. .
*K
Dr. Georc Groppecx, Baden-Baden. On the Psycho-Analytic
Treatment of Organic Illnesses.
The lecturer sought to-prove that factors of censorship exist
which permit organic troubles to develop in order to keep repressed
material from consciousness. One invites healthy or sick people
to look at the objects on their writing table, to close their eyes
and then to name the objects; this or that object will be omitted,
and also things that are associated with something repressed. If the
repressed material is too powerful then the censorship is increased
rendering the person short-sighted and eventually limits the possi-
REPORTS 357
bility of seeing through congestion of the blood vessels of the
eyes. The process is the same in the visceral sphere as the formation
of antitoxine by the organism through intoxication or of fever and
suppuration through infection. ie)
If the repressed material is produced or its affective content
set free, then the congestion is unnecessary and can be given up.
They can; they need not. The same thing is valid for all spheres
of life of the organism. Examples were quoted.
*
Dr. L. Buyswanegr, Kreuzlingen. | Psycho-Analysis and Clinical
Psychiatry.
An attempt to compare the two directions of investigation with
each other in their fundamental concepts. This is done at first by
means of the individual disease concepts of psychiatry with more
especial consideration of the most recent views in the sphere of
characterology (Kretschmer), and that by means of the three con-
ceptual layers which form the system of psycho-analysis, namely,
the pure psychological investigation or that of the personality, the
dynamic-qualitative, and the biological-teleological methods of con-
sideration. The differences were then examined that exist between
psycho-analysis and psychiatry with respect to the concept of disease
and health, the concept of cure and diagnosis. In conclusion the
psycho-analytical direction of investigation as a system moulding
mental and psychical phenomena into a unitary entity from the
point of view of performance was contrasted with psychiatry asa
conglomerate connected together only by its practical tasks.
k
}
Dr. A. Srircxe, Den Dolder, Holland. The Relations between
Neuroses and Psychoses.
Both categories have their root in the relative damming up of
the libido, infantile fixations, and ambivalency, as Freud has shown
im the case of the neuroses. The difference between the two
groups is a quantitative one. The boundary is dependent on ‘the
stage of development or regression of the social civilisation. -
858 REPORTS
' The criterion of the lay conception of mental disease lies in
the over-development of behaviour (including speech) on the part
of those who are mentally ill, which destroys the normal repression.
In both groups the regression of the libido and ego impulses can
extend to the lowest stages. The regression in the neuroses concerns
in general small quantities. The reconstruction in the neuroses is
a compromise; its result in the psychoses stands in general on a
lower level both for the. libido and ego impulses.
The obsessional neurosis takes a medial-position between
psychosis and neurosis. The regression of the ego impulses proceeds
parallel to that of the libido. It is not the narcissistic regression
in itself that determines the constitutional disposition in the
psychoses, but the fixation of the lower level. This fixation often
goes together with some libidinous gratification of the lower level.
The differences between the symptoms are conditioned, apart
from the depth of regression, also by the distribution of the libido
over parts of the body. The psychotic breaking through of the
censorship is conditioned by abnormally strong pleasure in thinking.
Organic increase of libido plays a greater part in the psychoses.
Organic inpoverishment of the libido is responsible for the schizo-
phrenic pseudo-dementia. The four Freudian types of neurotic
sickness occur also in the psychoses. In addition psychoses often
follow infantile wish-fulfilments (for example, death of a scion
perverse practice rendered possible).
A guiding influence in the reconstruction of society belongs to
Freudianism.
*%
O. Prister, Ziirich. The Significance of Psycho-Analysis for
Constitutional Law and Political Economy.
The lecturer showed how the prevailing folk psychology, since
it recognises totemism as the point of departure of the formation
of the state, was forced to face a riddle that was insoluble by its
means, while Freud through his studies on living people was able
to make intelligible from a unitary point of view the different
characteristics of totemism, namely, the ambivalent treatment of
the totem as an object of anxiety and as a protecting spirit, the
prohibition of killing, the sacramental meal, and the connection
with exogamy. The choice of plants as totem was illustrated by.
REPORTS 359
aversions to the use of vegetable foods, by means of a phobia
against plucking flowers, and by the drawings of a boy fourteen
years old who expressed unconsciously his sexual wishes in drawings
of plants. }
Unconscious roots of the different constitutions of a state were
shown in the day-dreams of two brothers, of whom one resembled
- his father and was a monarchist, while the other took after his
mother and preferred republicanism. The father complexes of
Bismarck and Bebel expressed themselves in monarchism and state
socialism, and also the anarchist remains attached to the father.
The Irishman often hates in England the father, as he loves in
Ireland the mother. In a patient ot Ernst Schneider the separation
of church and state became the centre of his interest as soon as
the divorce of his parents became acute.
The importance of psychology of the unconscious for the normal
life of the state, for war and revolution, was only touched upon.
In the second part the life of society was referred to and
especially the psychology of capitalism. Max Weber finds the
sources of capitalism chiefly explained in the doctrinal thought of
‘Calvin, but did not explain how this theory could be maintained
in contradiction to the New Testament and its prohibition of
riches, and how also Calvin’s demand to place gold in the
service of God was abandoned. From the analyses of living
people it is proved that the spirit of capitalism everywhere, and
also in Calvinism, presupposes repression of love. Thereby may
be discovered analytically in pathological capitalistic predispositions
the CEdipus attitude against the father, narcissism, anal-erotism,
castration reactions or sadistic masochistic impulses. The results
as regards religion, ethics and society correspond with the processes
in the obsessional neuroses. Capitalism without religion, frequently
to be understood as desublimation, bears in itself the germ of the
struggle of all against all, as does political imperialism.
Thus in consequence of the despising of the law of love, the
tragedy of Peer Gynt is repeated in the life of society, and the
curse of the Nibelung is fulfilled.
*
- Dr. Sasina Sprexremy, Lausanne. On the Question of the Origin
and Development of Speech. — |
‘360 REPORTS
Autistic speech which is not intended for communication and
understanding of other people is distinguished from “social speaking”.
Autistic speech is the primary one. Spielrein considers that singing
and words, 7. e. speaking. aloud, essentially belong to social
speech. Likewise there are the “social” or “sociable” arts, such as
music and poetry, which explains their high popularity. Theories
of the origin of speech were analysed. The question was especially
considered whether the child itself invents language and to what
are traced back the childish “alteration of words”. The mechanisms
that are supposed to be the origin of the first words, Mama and
Papa, were investigated and supported by observations of others;
the lecturer traced them back to the act of sucking. These words
are the bearers of pleasure which the child experiences in the act
of sucking, and to them may be attributed the enormous signi-
ficance of the first wish-fulfilment in phantasy, because here
the wish, directed on to an external object, cannot be gratified
whenever desired. In consequence of the pleasurable sensation com-
municated at first in the act of sucking by means of another
living being, the child perceives the idea of an external and
pleasure-bringing object, for which one longs and which can be
fetched by the calling out of the wish word derived from the act
of sucking. In this way originated the first forms of social speech,
which at the same time are signs of communication between the
ego and the external world, therefore signs of expression of the
germinating hetero-erotism. .
The relations between word-formation and memory of the ©
childish feelings were discussed and examples given showing that
the childish formation of words and sentences or an alteration of
both could be explained, amongst other ways, from the adaption
to the new psychological phase of development, assimilation to the
old and decay corresponding with subconscious elaboration. —
Dr. Marcarete Srecmann, Dresden. Form and Content in Psycho-
Analysis. | ae
Content is the complex, the substance of the occurrence, the “What”
of the neurosis. Under form is to be understood the nature, the “How”
of the occurrence, the mental structure that is expressed in it.
REPORTS 361
The contents are not only the same in all neuroses, they can
be constantly demonstrated in the healthy. The form is typically
different and within the bounds of certain types individually
distinct, so that in spite of the similarity of the contents each case
for analysis is something new and peculiar to itself.
Besides the content it is also important to pay full attention
to the form and the principle of mental activity in the patient.
Freud, who is not only the father but also the classic of analysis,
has dealt in a masterly manner with these two aspects of the
subject of the analysis. Though observation of the contents, the
grouping of complexes, is important and necessary for scientific
investigation, for the further extension of the system of Freud’s
theories the lecturer has found very fruitful for therapeutic practice
a closer consideration of the individual law of form. A few examples
from analyses were quoted.
The uncovering of the contents by means of the bringing up
of complexes from the unconscious, from the spheres of feeling
and of the irrational, aims at making them accessible to the in-
fluence of reason and conviction. What effects this is consciousness.
The recognising and making conscious of the law of form
raises the forces (impulses) from the lower stage of their objectivation
to the higher one of conscious formation. The analysis has to
deliver the patient from the material state of bondage to a spiritual
state in which the contents, the material, is not denied and forced
(suppressed), but was further in organisation.
*
Dr. Hermmne Huc-Hetimuts, Vienna. On the technique of the
analysis of children.
The peculiarity of the childish mind and its relation to the
environment needs a special technique of analysis. Such an analysis
can only be carried out in children over six to seven years of
age; in younger ones only a psycho-analytical education can take
lace.
: ‘It is advisable to treat children in their home and accustomed
surroundings, and not to have them lying down, as this position
‘is connected by the child with phantasies of being overpowered
or seduced. . Wel, porttiag Pits, Gd Deane )
362 REPORTS
From seven to eight years of age play has often to form the
bridge for treatment; in older children it is useful to tell of the
tricks of other children as a good introduction to analysis. Since
the analyst is oriented by the parents concerning the “naughtiness”
of the child one need not be afraid of “corrupting” the patient
through such communications.
Positive transference is brought about as a rule in the very
first hours, and is immediately played off against the parents;
hence it is necessary to explain to the parents the significance of
the transference, so that the parental love does not suffer too
much from the apparent turning away of their child.. The negative
transference is clothed in the form of constant fear of betrayal by
the analyst to the parents. The discussion of sexual questions
requires special tact; here besides a strong and trustful attachment
of the child there frequently appear tendencies arising out of an
over-great repression, namely, the impulse to humiliate the analyst.
Great use can be made of free associations in youthful patients;
dreams also furnish valuable material from the unconscious. The
analysis of children leads to the knowledge that in the child there
exists another layer in the unconscious, another distribution of
the systems conscious and pre-conscious, than in adults.
The relation of the analyst to the parents is a difficult chapter
in the analysis of youthful patients. His chief task towards them
is to keep them from actively participating in the treatment, and
to get them to recognise that their only cooperation lies in patience
and toleration. The parents have to recognise that they ought to
demand of their mentally sick child just as little as regards lear-
ning as in a child suffering physically.
| I have not yet seen an analysis of children fail on account of
the resistance of the young patient, but more than one on account
of the resistance of the parenhs
* * *
THE BRITISH PSYCHO-ANALYTICAL SOCIETY.
There have been nine Meetings of the British Psycho-Analytical
Society since the last report.
The Meetings held on May 13th, lene 10th., July 8th. and
July 19th. were devoted to an exposition by Mr. J. C.. Fliigel of
REPORTS 363
Freud's articles in the “Sammlung kleiner Schriften zur Neurosen-
lehre”, fourth volume, on “Triebe und Triebschicksale”, “Die Ver-
drangung”, and “Das Unbewufte”.
On May 27th. a Special Meeting of Members was convened
to consider and adopt the revised rules of the Society.
The General Annual Meeting of the Society was held on
October 11th., Dr.Ernest Jones was re-elected President, Dr. Douglas
Bryan Honorary Secretary, and Dr. W. H. B. Stoddart Honorary
Treasurer. All the Associate Members were re-elected, and
Dr. Estelle Maude Cole was elected a Member. The Secretary
reported that one Member, Col. Sutherland, 1. M.S. had died, and
that one Member, Dr. Devine, and two Associate Members,
Dr. Lavers and Mr. Ballard, had resigned. Fifteen Members and
Associate Members attended the Congress at The Hague.
Seven new Associate Members have been elected:
Dr. O. H. Bowen, Gwynant, Peaks Hill, Purley.
Dr. Chuckerbutty, c/o Grindley’s, Calcutta, India.
Dr. M. Culpin, Slydersgate, Loughton, Essex.
Dr. J. Rickman, 18A, Elsham Road, Kensington, W. 14.
Dr. T. Waddelow Smith, City Asylum, Nottingham.
Dr. Snowden, 21, New Cavendish Street, W. 1.
Dr. C. R. A. Thacker, Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge.
Affiliation of the Society to the International Psycho-Analytical
Association was confirmed at the Congress.
At a Meeting held on October 15th. Mrs. Riviere gave the
chief points from Prof. Freud’s address to the Congress, and a
discussion followed. |
At a Meeting held on November 11th. a discussion took place
on War or Battle Dreams, with special reference to the content
of the dream in as far as it was an exact replica of an actual
experience, and also its relation to the pathogenic trauma.
Dr. Wright said that in the cases he had examined soon after
return from the front the war dreams were frequently repetitions
of pure experiences, but after a short while these soon had in-
different matter added.
Dr. Culpin thought that only a very small percentage were
pure battle dreams, and even these might not have been pure it
they had been more carefully investigated.
‘Dr. Brend said that he had noted very few pure battle
dreams.
364 REPORTS
Dr. Riggafl had noted only one case of a pure battle dream
and he was even inclined to doubt this.
Dr. Devine (a visitor) could only recall one case of a pure
battle dream.
Dr. Davison quoted a case of a pure battle dream which was
associated with avery similar occurrence that the patient experienced
at seven years of age.
Dr. Bowen considered there was only a very small percentage
of pure battle dreams.
Dr. Bryan said that he had not met a case of a pure battle
dream, but the cases he had examined had been some time in
hospital and away from the front. An occasional auditory dream
of bursting shells appeared to be a pure battle dream. He con-
sidered that very few so-called battle dreams referred to the
pathogenic trauma.
Dr. Eder (a visitor) could give no instance of a pure battle
dream even in cases seen soon after the trauma, and only a very
small percentage of the dreams referred to the pathogenic trauma.
Dr. Fitzgerald (a visitor) considered that about 15 per cent of
battle dreams were pure representations, but they did not necessarily
refer to the pathogenic trauma.
Dr. Harper (a visitor) considered that the pure battle dream
was rare. He mentioned the case of a man who dreamed a battle
dream which he did not immediately recollect as such until he
had definitely thought about it.
Dr. Ernest jones summed up the discussion, and said it was
not yet proved that unaltered reality dreams occurred. He expounded
Freud’s views on the primitiveness of the tendency to live traumatic
experiences over again as developed in “Jenseits des Lustprinzips”.
At a Meeting held on December 9th. Dr. R. M. Riggall read
a paper on “Some Recent Cases of Impotence”.
Author’s Abstract :
Cases requiring a lengthy analysis contrasted with those clearing
up with extreme ease. Impotence a very common symptom in the
war neuroses. Cases of Ejaculatio Praecox illustrating Abraham’s con-
clusions. Comments on the general impotence of every day life with
some original views on the effect of the female on the male.
The reading of the paper was followed by a discussion.
Dovctas Bryan: Hon. Secretary.
k
REPORTS 365
SWISS PSYCHO-ANALYTICAL SOCIETY
On February 10th. 1919 a circular letter was sent to a number
of persons by the Rev. Dr. Oskar Pfister, Mrs. Mira Oberholzer, M.D.,
and Dr. Emil Oberholzer in Ziirich, inviting them to a meeting in
Ziirich on February 21st. The object of this meeting was the
foundation of a Swiss Psycho-Analytical Society embracing all those
adherents of Psycho-Analysis who had not accepted the theories
of Adler and Jung. The Swiss Psycho-Analytical Society was then
to apply to the International Psycho-Analytical Association for affi-
liation. Its meetings were to be held not only in Ztrich but from
time to time in some centrally situated place which would make
it easy for all members to attend.
Of the fifty persons invited twenty-one (among these twelve
medical men, three of them psychiatrists in public asylums) pro-
mised to be present at the meeting or to join as members after
the forming of the Society. A number of others hesitated to declare
their membership though they regarded the project favourably;
some of these asked to be received as guests of the Society. Three
of the members were from French Switzerland.
Inaugural meeting on March 21st. 1919. | |
In the course of the discussion on the rules of the society it
was resolved that each member be. obliged to adhere strictly to
the state medical regulations concerning the treatment of patients
by non-medical men. In view of “wild analysis” it was resolved
that those analysts who are not medical men should work in co-
operation with-a doctor to avoid diagnostic errors.
In the discussion about the terms of admission it was resolved
to draw up the rules free from all sense of illiberality and
intolerance but to exclude all those applying for membership whose
personality would render a misuse of the psycho-analytic technique
not improbable. The officers of the Society were then duly elected.
Practical reasons made it necessary for the President Dr. Emil
Oberholzer, living in Zitirich, to accept at the same time the offices
of Treasurer, Secretary and Librarian.
It was decided to hold the meetings only once in a month.
1st. meeting, March 24th. 1919.
Dr. H. Sachs, Dr. O. Rank and Dr. Ernest Jones, as guests:
“Psycho-Analysis as an Intellectual Movement”. After the reading
of the papers which gave a survey of the psycho-analytical move-
366 REPORTS
ment it was formally and unanimously resolved to apply
to the International Psycho-Analytical Association for affiliation.
The rules of the Society were finally drawn up. It was resolved
to admit guests as liberally as possible, especially to papers of
universal interest. It was resolved that the subscription for the
year should be 10 francs to furnish the means for the library.
RUuLES oF THE Swiss SOCIETY FOR Psycuo-ANnaALysIs.
1
The Swiss Society for Psycho-Analysis, which shall constitute
an autonomous National Branch Society of the International Psycho-
Analytical Association, shall have as its object the theoretical and
practical exercise and encouragement of the psycho-analytic
method founded by Freud.
: 2
This object shall be attained :
(1) By means of scientific discussions, so far as possible with
the participation of all the Members;
(2) By the foundation of a library, by the circulation of
periodicals, and by the opportunity for a written interchange of
views;
(3) By giving information to non-Members on matters connected
with psycho-analysis. |
| ig 3
Any person desiring to be elected to the Society must be pro-
posed by two Members, who must communicate directly with the
President. The latter shall lay the application for Membership, which
must be made in writing, before the Executive Committee, and
shall communicate the result of their deliberations to the next
Ordinary Meeting. The election shall take place at the next sub-
sequent Meeting, voting being by ballot; a two-thirds majority shall
be required, and all non-resident Members shall receive notice and
have an opportunity of recording their opinions. The result shall
not be communicated to the candidate until after the Meeting, and
in the event .of a postponement or rejection of his candidature no
grounds shall be stated. .
The Members of the Society shall be pledged to a strict ob-
servance of the laws governing the practice of medicine in the
locality in which they reside. —
REPORTS 367
Guests shall be admitted to Meetings only if notice has pre-
viously been given by a Member to the President and his consent
obtained. Guests may be excluded from lectures and discussions
which are not suitable for a wider audience.
4
Members may attend and vote at all Meetings, and shall have
the right of electing and of being elected.
The amount of the Annual Subscription shall be determined
each year at the General Meeting in accordance with the actual
requirements.
Members shall have the right of attendance at the Meetings
of all Branch Societies. They shall be entitled to receive regularly
the organ of the Society, and to be invited to the Congress of
the International Psycho-Analytical Association. At the Congress
they shall have the power of electing and of being elected.
5
Membership shall cease:
(1) On voluntary resignation, which must be notified in writing
to the Executive Committee;
(2) If a Member fails to fulfil his obligations;
(3) In case of a gross injury to the interests of the Society, on
the proposal of the Executive Committee, by the resolution of a
three-quarters’ majority of the Members present at an Ordinary
Meeting.
6
The functions of the Society shall be carried out by:
(1) The Ordinary Meeting;
(2) The Executive Committee, consisting of the President, the
Vice-President, and three other Members (one of the Members
of the Committee discharging the offices of Secretary and
Treasurer).
The Executive Committee shall be elected by ballot for a period
of one year by an absolute majority of the Ordinary Meeting.
Every Member of the Executive Committee may be re-elected to
the same Office for a period not exceeding three years in all. The
Executive Committee shall represent the Society in all external
relations, and shall be entrusted with the conduct of its affairs. It
shall present an Annual Report to the General Meeting.
24
368 REPORTS
The first Officers of the Society shall be nominated by. the
Constituent Meeting after the Rules have been approved.
7
The dissolution of the Society shall only be effected by the
General Meeting with an attendance of at least two thirds of the
total number of Members and by a three-quarters’ majority. The
Meeting which resolves upon the dissolution shall also determine
the disposal of the Society’s property. Should there be no quorum,
the decision shall be made at a second Meeting by an absolute
majority of those present.
Zurich, March 24th. 1919.
2nd meeting, May 16th. 1919.
Dr. O. Pfister: The biological and psychological foundations
of Expressionism.
3rd. meeting, Jane 20th. 1919.
Dr. A. Kielholz: Jakob Bé6hme, a pathographical contribution to
the psychology of mysticism. (An essay on this theme appeared as
No. 17. of the Schriften zur Angewandten Seelenkunde).
4th. meeting, July 11th. 1919.
Dr. H. Rorschach: Studies of Sectarians. Part. 1: “Johannes
Binggeli, the founder of the Sylvestrian brotherhood in Schwarzen-
burg”.
Sth. Meeting, September 19th. 1919.
Dr. H. Rorschach: Studies of sectarians Part. 2: Anton Unter-
nahrer, the founder of the sect of the Antonians.
Dr. R. de Saussure: Les Antoniens 4 Genéve.
Dr. E. Oberholzer: Presentation of a case of Glossolalia.
Oth. meeting, November 7th. 1919.
Dr. F. Morel: “A propos de quelques manifestations infantiles
de l’introversion chez les mystiques”.
List of Members, December, 1920.
ps
. Prof. Dr. phil. P. Bovet, Geneva, Dir. de l’institut J. J. Rousseau,
Taconnerie 5. |
Priv.-Dozent Dr. phil. F. Morel, Geneva, 57 Route de Chéne.
. Dr. med. R. de Saussure, Geneva, Tertasse 2.
G. de Gontaut-Biron, Warsaw, Aleja Ujazdowska 19.
Dr. med. Hans Jakob Schmid, Leysin, Vaudois.
Ah WN
oon n
REPORTS 369
. Dr. phil. E. Schneider, Bern, Erlachstrafe 5.
. Dr. jur.' Paul Dubi, Redakteur, Basel, Mittlere Strafe 127.
. Emil Liithy, Basel, Neubadstrafe 49.
. Dr. med. A. Kielholz, II. Arzt, Kénigsfelden, Kantonale Irren-
anstalt.
. Frl. Dr. med. S. Kempner, Ass.-Arzt, Rheinau, Kantonale Irren-
anstalt.
. Dr. med. Philipp Sarasin, Oberarzt, Rheinau, Kantonale Irrenanstalt.
. Dr. med. L. Binswanger, Kreuzlingen, Sanatorium Belle-Vue.
. Dr. med. H. Rorschach, II. Arzt, Herisau, Kantonale Irrenanstalt.
. Dr. med. F. Kornmann, Dir. Arzt, Lugano, Kurhaus Monte Bré.
. Dr. med. Dorian Feigenbaum, Jerusalem.
. Dr. med. Max Geiser, Dir. Arzt, Unter-Aegeri, Sanatorium
Adelheid.
. Albert Furrer, Bezirkssekretar pro Juventute, Zurich, Siid-
strafge 78.
. Fri. Dr. med. Emma First, Zurich, Apollostrafe 21.
. Dr. phil. Ulrich Griininger, Zurich, Stadtisches Knabenheim,
Amtsvormundschaft, Selnau 9.
. Walter Hofmann, Lehrer, Zurich, Russenweg 9.
. Dr. phil. et cand. med. M. Nachmansohn, Zurich, Herbartstrafse 1.
. Ernst Neuenhofer, Zurich, Bellerivestraffe 20,
. Frau Dr. med. Mira Oberholzer, Zurich, Ramistrafe 39.
. Dr. med. Emil Oberholzer, Zurich, Ramistrafe 39.
. Dr. theol. Oskar Pfister, Pfarrer, Zurich, Schienhutgasse 6.
. Dr. med. Gust. Ad. Wehrli, Zurich, Leonhardstrafe 1.
. Frl. med. pract. H. Etter, Zurich.
. Dr. phil. W. Mackenzie, Genoa.
. Med.pract. Hans Behn-Eschenburg, Herisan, Kantonale Irrenanstalt.
. Albert Peter, Lehrer, Zurich.
. Dr. phil. Jean Piaget, Neuchatel.
. Hermann Tobler, Leiter. des Landeserziehungsheimes Hof-
Oberkirch.
Executive Committee
President: E. Oberholzer. Vice-President: H. Rorschach.
Ph. Sarasin.
F. Morel.
O. Pfister.
ok
370
REPORTS
HUNGARIAN PSYCHO-ANALYTICAL SOCIETY (FREUD SOCIETY)
Report of the Society from Jan. 1st. to Dec. 31st., 1920.
Jan. 4.
Jan. 18.
Feb. 1.
Feb. 15.
Feb. 29.
March 4.
March 28.
April 11.
April 18.
April 25.
May 9.
May 30.
Sept. 26.
Oct. 10.
Oct. 24.
Nov. 7.
Nov. 21.
Dec. 5.
Dec. 19.
Feb. Ist.
April 18.
Scientific meetings:
Dr. B. v. Felszeghy: Janus.
Dr. I. Hollés: Relations to Psycho-Analysis in the
Psychiatry before Freud.
Case Reports.
Dr. G. Réheim: On Totemism in Australia.
Dr. G. Réheim: Second Part of his Paper.
Eugenia Sokolnicka: On the Analysis of an Infantile
Obsessional Neurosis.
Dr. S. Ferenczi: On Active Therapy.
Discussion of Dr. Ferenczi’s Paper.
A. Kolnai: Psycho-Analysis and Sociology. '
Discussion of Dr. Ferenczi’s Paper continued.
Dr. S. Feldmann: Analysis of Blushing.
Dr. J. Eisler: An Unconscious Phantasy of Pregnancy
in a Man in the Guise of a Traumatic Hysteria.
Dr. S. Ferenczi: Report of the VIth. International
Psycho-Analytical Congress at the Hague.
Dr. S. Ferenczi: Psycho-Analytical Observations on Tic.
Dr. J. Eisler: Desire for and Disturbed Capacity for Sleep.
Dr. S. Feldmann: On Traumatic Psychoses.
Eugenia Sokolnicka: Selma Lagerléf’s Herrenhof Myth
M. Klein: Contribution to Analysis in Early Childhood.
Dr. Hermann: On the Psychological. Conditions of
Psycho-Analysis.
Business meeting:
(Annual Meeting) The annual Report was read and
accepted, the Officiers re-elected, and the annual sub-
scription raised to 220 crowns.
A. Kolnai (Budapest VI. Aréna utca 32a) was elected
to membership. |
Note: At the end of the year Dr. J. Harnik leaves our Society
and enters the Berlin Society.
Dr. Rapo, SECRETARY
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THE INTERNATIONAL PSYCIO-ANALYTICAL PRESS
45 New Cavendish Street, London, W. 1
THE INTERNATIONAL PSYCHO-ANALYTICAL
LIBRARY
Edited by Ernest Jones
No. 1
ADDRESSES ON PSYCHO-ANALYSIS
b
ae? PUTNAM, M.D.
Emeritus Professor of Neurology, Harvard University
With a Preface by
- SIGM. FREUD, M.D., LL.D.
and
An Obituary and Bibliography by
. ERNEST JONES, M.D.
From the Obituary:
“One of the greatest blows that the young science of psycho-analysis has
suffered has been the death of Dr. J. J. Putnam...... whose name will always
be remembered with honour and gratitude in the history of psycho-analysis.”’
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No. 2
PSYCHO-ANALYSIS
AND
THE WAR NEUROSES.
by
Drs. S. FERENCZI (Budapest), KARL ABRAHAM (Berlin),
ERNST SIMMEL (Berlin) and ERNEST JONES (London)
Introduction by
Prof. SIGM. FREUD (Vienna)
From the Introduction:
“The war neuroses, in so far as they differ from the ordinary neuroses of
peace time through particular peculiarities, are to be regarded as traumatic neuroses,
whose existence has been rendered possible or promoted through an ego-conflict.”
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THE INTERNATIONAL PSYCHO-ANALYTICAL PRESS
45 New Cavendish Street, London, W. 1
S 7 es + ? ©: As : os
ORIGINAL ARTICLES. a geet ee ee
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CONTENTS: ©) ga
(ALL RIGHTS RESERVED) itis
C. P. OBERNDORF. Reaction to Personal Ames 5 Oak aun
AUG. STARCKE. The Reversal of the ee in Delusions s he
of Persecution . . . Acta on ae ee fe
J. H. W. VAN OPHUY SEN On the Origin of the F eeling of
Persecution,” iia% <i. ° ‘ ; sane hts me
C. W. S. DAVIES- JONES. A Case of War Shock Ic Resulting from
Sex-Inversion Sette . cet SAY gstee
H. FLOURNOY. eae on ce syakileen of acer and. Fi ‘ire
ERNEST JONES. A “Linguistic F actor in English Characterology
HANNS SACHS. The Wish to be a By We aera eeneTete
“DOUGLAS BRYAN. An Instance of the Care } Needed i in 1 Drawing
Conclusions .. . Sse ee chee e a woe
BARBARA LOW. A Revived Sensition-M er 01 s = :
ERNEST JONES. A Substitutive Memory «. a tt ene
COLLECTIVE REVIEWS. Be a ee ® By
ED. HITSCHMANN. Theory ms insanet bis gee
KARL ABRAHAM. Special Pathology and ria sah eae of the
Neuroses and Psychoses. -si¢ "5.3 «sens 280. os
J. H. W. VAN OPHUIJSEN. se pediotAcgatitle Therapy os i 85.
S. FERENCZI. General. Theory of the Neuroses. . ... . . 2 y 4
H. VON HUG-HELLMUTH. Child beha. 3 and Education . a 316
NOTES * e ° % ba : @:, bie ® ne . ° iF be ‘ ay Sy Ae = £ ° *, a 4
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