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Psychoanalysis International
註釋Volume 1: EuropeIt is well known that the cradle of psychoanalysis was in Vienna, the scene of Sigmund Freud's activities at the beginning of the century. But how and when did psychoanalysis reach the other European countries? What developments did it undergo there? How did the different mentalities, political, and cultural backgrounds as well as the personal particularities of its respective advocates affect psychoanalysis? What was its position in the past and what is its position today? - These and other questions on the varied development and the present situation of psychoanalysis in the countries of Eastern and Western Europe are investigated by renowned psychoanalysts drawing on the experience and knowledge acquired in their own work. The result is a new compendium on psychoanalysis in Europe containing all up-to-date information; informative and instructive, at times as exciting as a detective story, it is possibly of interest even to non-analysts. Content: Preface by R. H. Etchegoyen - Foreword and Introduction by P. Kutter. Austria: The Viennese Psychoanalytical Society from 1918 to 1945 by H. Leupold-Lowenthal. Austria: The Viennese Psychoanalytical Society after 1945 by W. Berner. Further Institutions in Austria Not Connected with the IPA, Additional Note by A. Laimbock - Belgium by M. Haber - Czechoslovakia by E. Fischer - Denmark by H. Paikin - Finland by E. Roos - France 1893-1965 by A. de Mijolla - Germany by P. Kutter - East Germany by M. Geyer - Great Britain by P. King and A. Holder - Hungary by J. Harmatta and G. Szonyi - Israel by U. Lowental and Y. Cohen - Italy by A. Novelletto - Lithuania by R. Augis and V. Pocius - The Netherlands by H. Groen-Prakken and L. de Nobel - Poland by K. Pawlak and Z. Sokolik, with additions by A. Kokoszka and J. Pawlik - Spain by M. L. Munoz and R. Grinberg - Sweden by J. Norman - Switzerland by A. Moser.Volume II: America, Asia, Australia, Further European CountriesPolitical changes leave fissures and rifts on the landscape of nations and inevitably affect the development of the sciences. This holds true also for psychoanalysis which, from the very beginning, is internationally oriented in a multicultural world. In volume 2 a colourful map of psychoanalysis is offered with historiographic aspects as well as vivid descriptions of the present situation, not only in the already known Western world of North and Latin America, Australia and the Far East but also in the new Eastern countries which, since the fall of the Iron Curtain, have come to scene.