Leipzig und Wien 1913 Hugo Heller Cloth
Tmago: Zeitschrift für Anwendung der Psychoanalyse auf die Geisteswissenschaften band II 1913 The name goes back to Carl Spitteler's autobiographical novel Imago, published in 1906. By publishing the magazine, Freud wanted to establish psychoanalysis as a way of seeing and thinking that also plays a role outside of medicine in understanding culture and society and in the arts. The magazine achieved this goal through both the choice of topics and the selection of authors. In addition to doctors, psychologists and lay analysts, these also included theologians, sociologists, anthropologists, philosophers, cultural scientists and writers.[3] The magazine was aimed at both specialist audiences and interested laypeople and became the publisher's most successful medium until the publisher was dissolved due to the influence of the National Socialists. The magazine was continued in 1939 by Hanns Sachs and with the collaboration of Anna Freud in the USA under the name American Imago and by merging it with the International Journal of Psychoanalysis, which is still published quarterly today.[4] The changing subtitles show the shift in the focus or interest of the editors: the years up to 1926 had the addition of Journal for the Application of Psychoanalysis to the Humanities, and from 1927 to 1932 the subtitle was: Journal for the Application of Psychoanalysis to the Natural and Natural Sciences Humanities and, from 1933, journal for psychoanalytic psychology, its border areas and applications. From 1933 onwards there was a section of literature reviews in which, in addition to psychoanalytic specialist literature, a wide range of works from the border areas were also included. In addition to the three editors themselves, the international authors included Karl Abraham, Alice and Michael, Willy Bardas, Marie Bonaparte, Max Deri, Helene Deutsch, Sándor Ferenczi, Otto Fenichel, Eduard Hitschmann, Hermine Hug-Hellmuth, Ernest Jones, Ernst Kris, René Laforgue, Thomas Mann, Oskar Pfister, Hans Prinzhorn, Theodor Reik, Lou Andreas-Salomé, Herbert Silberer, Sabina Spielrein, René Spitz, Dorothy Tiffany Burlingham, Nelly Wolffheim, Hans Zulliger and Stefan Zweig. bimonthly magazine, complete volume of year 1913, six parts hard cover With gilded titles on the spine, 24,5 x 18 cm, 612 pp lightly faded spines, minor shelf wear, all are in fine condition, no internal markings, pages clean, binding firm Overall a very good complete set
Phone number : +32(0)496 80 81 92
Leipzig und Wien 1914 Hugo Heller Cloth
Imago Zeitschrift für Anwendung der Psychoanalyse auf die Geisteswissenschaften band III 1914 The name goes back to Carl Spitteler's autobiographical novel Imago, published in 1906. By publishing the magazine, Freud wanted to establish psychoanalysis as a way of seeing and thinking that also plays a role outside of medicine in understanding culture and society and in the arts. The magazine achieved this goal through both the choice of topics and the selection of authors. In addition to doctors, psychologists and lay analysts, these also included theologians, sociologists, anthropologists, philosophers, cultural scientists and writers.[3] The magazine was aimed at both specialist audiences and interested laypeople and became the publisher's most successful medium until the publisher was dissolved due to the influence of the National Socialists. The magazine was continued in 1939 by Hanns Sachs and with the collaboration of Anna Freud in the USA under the name American Imago and by merging it with the International Journal of Psychoanalysis, which is still published quarterly today.[4] The changing subtitles show the shift in the focus or interest of the editors: the years up to 1926 had the addition of Journal for the Application of Psychoanalysis to the Humanities, and from 1927 to 1932 the subtitle was: Journal for the Application of Psychoanalysis to the Natural and Natural Sciences Humanities and, from 1933, journal for psychoanalytic psychology, its border areas and applications. From 1933 onwards there was a section of literature reviews in which, in addition to psychoanalytic specialist literature, a wide range of works from the border areas were also included. In addition to the three editors themselves, the international authors included Karl Abraham, Alice and Michael, Willy Bardas, Marie Bonaparte, Max Deri, Helene Deutsch, Sándor Ferenczi, Otto Fenichel, Eduard Hitschmann, Hermine Hug-Hellmuth, Ernest Jones, Ernst Kris, René Laforgue, Thomas Mann, Oskar Pfister, Hans Prinzhorn, Theodor Reik, Lou Andreas-Salomé, Herbert Silberer, Sabina Spielrein, René Spitz, Dorothy Tiffany Burlingham, Nelly Wolffheim, Hans Zulliger and Stefan Zweig. bimonthly magazine, complete volume of year 1914, six parts hard cover With gilded titles on the spine, 24,5 x 18 cm,544 pp lightly faded spines, minor shelf wear, all are in fine condition, no internal markings, pages clean, binding firm Overall a very good complete set
Phone number : +32(0)496 80 81 92
Leipzig Wien Zurich 1923 Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag Cloth
Imago Zeitschrift für Anwendung der Psychoanalyse auf die Geisteswissenschaften band IX 1923 The name goes back to Carl Spitteler's autobiographical novel Imago, published in 1906. By publishing the magazine, Freud wanted to establish psychoanalysis as a way of seeing and thinking that also plays a role outside of medicine in understanding culture and society and in the arts. The magazine achieved this goal through both the choice of topics and the selection of authors. In addition to doctors, psychologists and lay analysts, these also included theologians, sociologists, anthropologists, philosophers, cultural scientists and writers.[3] The magazine was aimed at both specialist audiences and interested laypeople and became the publisher's most successful medium until the publisher was dissolved due to the influence of the National Socialists. The magazine was continued in 1939 by Hanns Sachs and with the collaboration of Anna Freud in the USA under the name American Imago and by merging it with the International Journal of Psychoanalysis, which is still published quarterly today.[4] The changing subtitles show the shift in the focus or interest of the editors: the years up to 1926 had the addition of Journal for the Application of Psychoanalysis to the Humanities, and from 1927 to 1932 the subtitle was: Journal for the Application of Psychoanalysis to the Natural and Natural Sciences Humanities and, from 1933, journal for psychoanalytic psychology, its border areas and applications. From 1933 onwards there was a section of literature reviews in which, in addition to psychoanalytic specialist literature, a wide range of works from the border areas were also included. In addition to the three editors themselves, the international authors included Karl Abraham, Alice and Michael, Willy Bardas, Marie Bonaparte, Max Deri, Helene Deutsch, Sándor Ferenczi, Otto Fenichel, Eduard Hitschmann, Hermine Hug-Hellmuth, Ernest Jones, Ernst Kris, René Laforgue, Thomas Mann, Oskar Pfister, Hans Prinzhorn, Theodor Reik, Lou Andreas-Salomé, Herbert Silberer, Sabina Spielrein, René Spitz, Dorothy Tiffany Burlingham, Nelly Wolffheim, Hans Zulliger and Stefan Zweig. bimonthly magazine, complete volume of year 1923, six parts hard cover With gilded titles on the spine, 24,5 x 18 cm,360 pp lightly faded spines, minor shelf wear, all are in fine condition, no internal markings, pages clean, binding firm Overall a very good complete set
Phone number : +32(0)496 80 81 92
Leipzig Wien Zurich 1924 Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag Cloth
Imago Zeitschrift für Anwendung der Psychoanalyse auf die Geisteswissenschaften band X 1924 The name goes back to Carl Spitteler's autobiographical novel Imago, published in 1906. By publishing the magazine, Freud wanted to establish psychoanalysis as a way of seeing and thinking that also plays a role outside of medicine in understanding culture and society and in the arts. The magazine achieved this goal through both the choice of topics and the selection of authors. In addition to doctors, psychologists and lay analysts, these also included theologians, sociologists, anthropologists, philosophers, cultural scientists and writers.[3] The magazine was aimed at both specialist audiences and interested laypeople and became the publisher's most successful medium until the publisher was dissolved due to the influence of the National Socialists. The magazine was continued in 1939 by Hanns Sachs and with the collaboration of Anna Freud in the USA under the name American Imago and by merging it with the International Journal of Psychoanalysis, which is still published quarterly today.[4] The changing subtitles show the shift in the focus or interest of the editors: the years up to 1926 had the addition of Journal for the Application of Psychoanalysis to the Humanities, and from 1927 to 1932 the subtitle was: Journal for the Application of Psychoanalysis to the Natural and Natural Sciences Humanities and, from 1933, journal for psychoanalytic psychology, its border areas and applications. From 1933 onwards there was a section of literature reviews in which, in addition to psychoanalytic specialist literature, a wide range of works from the border areas were also included. In addition to the three editors themselves, the international authors included Karl Abraham, Alice and Michael, Willy Bardas, Marie Bonaparte, Max Deri, Helene Deutsch, Sándor Ferenczi, Otto Fenichel, Eduard Hitschmann, Hermine Hug-Hellmuth, Ernest Jones, Ernst Kris, René Laforgue, Thomas Mann, Oskar Pfister, Hans Prinzhorn, Theodor Reik, Lou Andreas-Salomé, Herbert Silberer, Sabina Spielrein, René Spitz, Dorothy Tiffany Burlingham, Nelly Wolffheim, Hans Zulliger and Stefan Zweig. bimonthly magazine, complete volume of year 1924, six parts hard cover With gilded titles on the spine, 24,5 x 18 cm,447 pp lightly faded spines, minor shelf wear, all are in fine condition, no internal markings, pages clean, binding firm Overall a very good complete set
Phone number : +32(0)496 80 81 92
Leipzig Wien Zurich 1925 Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag Cloth
Imago Zeitschrift für Anwendung der Psychoanalyse auf die Geisteswissenschaften band XI 1925 The name goes back to Carl Spitteler's autobiographical novel Imago, published in 1906. By publishing the magazine, Freud wanted to establish psychoanalysis as a way of seeing and thinking that also plays a role outside of medicine in understanding culture and society and in the arts. The magazine achieved this goal through both the choice of topics and the selection of authors. In addition to doctors, psychologists and lay analysts, these also included theologians, sociologists, anthropologists, philosophers, cultural scientists and writers.[3] The magazine was aimed at both specialist audiences and interested laypeople and became the publisher's most successful medium until the publisher was dissolved due to the influence of the National Socialists. The magazine was continued in 1939 by Hanns Sachs and with the collaboration of Anna Freud in the USA under the name American Imago and by merging it with the International Journal of Psychoanalysis, which is still published quarterly today.[4] The changing subtitles show the shift in the focus or interest of the editors: the years up to 1926 had the addition of Journal for the Application of Psychoanalysis to the Humanities, and from 1927 to 1932 the subtitle was: Journal for the Application of Psychoanalysis to the Natural and Natural Sciences Humanities and, from 1933, journal for psychoanalytic psychology, its border areas and applications. From 1933 onwards there was a section of literature reviews in which, in addition to psychoanalytic specialist literature, a wide range of works from the border areas were also included. In addition to the three editors themselves, the international authors included Karl Abraham, Alice and Michael, Willy Bardas, Marie Bonaparte, Max Deri, Helene Deutsch, Sándor Ferenczi, Otto Fenichel, Eduard Hitschmann, Hermine Hug-Hellmuth, Ernest Jones, Ernst Kris, René Laforgue, Thomas Mann, Oskar Pfister, Hans Prinzhorn, Theodor Reik, Lou Andreas-Salomé, Herbert Silberer, Sabina Spielrein, René Spitz, Dorothy Tiffany Burlingham, Nelly Wolffheim, Hans Zulliger and Stefan Zweig. bimonthly magazine, complete volume of year 1925, six parts hard cover With gilded titles on the spine, 24,5 x 18 cm,498 pp lightly faded spines, minor shelf wear, all are in fine condition, no internal markings, pages clean, binding firm Overall a very good complete set
Phone number : +32(0)496 80 81 92
Leipzig Wien Zurich 1926 Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag Cloth
Imago Zeitschrift für Anwendung der Psychoanalyse auf die Geisteswissenschaften band XII 1926 The name goes back to Carl Spitteler's autobiographical novel Imago, published in 1906. By publishing the magazine, Freud wanted to establish psychoanalysis as a way of seeing and thinking that also plays a role outside of medicine in understanding culture and society and in the arts. The magazine achieved this goal through both the choice of topics and the selection of authors. In addition to doctors, psychologists and lay analysts, these also included theologians, sociologists, anthropologists, philosophers, cultural scientists and writers.[3] The magazine was aimed at both specialist audiences and interested laypeople and became the publisher's most successful medium until the publisher was dissolved due to the influence of the National Socialists. The magazine was continued in 1939 by Hanns Sachs and with the collaboration of Anna Freud in the USA under the name American Imago and by merging it with the International Journal of Psychoanalysis, which is still published quarterly today.[4] The changing subtitles show the shift in the focus or interest of the editors: the years up to 1926 had the addition of Journal for the Application of Psychoanalysis to the Humanities, and from 1927 to 1932 the subtitle was: Journal for the Application of Psychoanalysis to the Natural and Natural Sciences Humanities and, from 1933, journal for psychoanalytic psychology, its border areas and applications. From 1933 onwards there was a section of literature reviews in which, in addition to psychoanalytic specialist literature, a wide range of works from the border areas were also included. In addition to the three editors themselves, the international authors included Karl Abraham, Alice and Michael, Willy Bardas, Marie Bonaparte, Max Deri, Helene Deutsch, Sándor Ferenczi, Otto Fenichel, Eduard Hitschmann, Hermine Hug-Hellmuth, Ernest Jones, Ernst Kris, René Laforgue, Thomas Mann, Oskar Pfister, Hans Prinzhorn, Theodor Reik, Lou Andreas-Salomé, Herbert Silberer, Sabina Spielrein, René Spitz, Dorothy Tiffany Burlingham, Nelly Wolffheim, Hans Zulliger and Stefan Zweig. bimonthly magazine, complete volume of year 1926, six parts hard cover With gilded titles on the spine, 24,5 x 18 cm,534 pp lightly faded spines, minor shelf wear, all are in fine condition, no internal markings, pages clean, binding firm Overall a very good complete set
Phone number : +32(0)496 80 81 92
Sugarco Edizioni broché Bristol illustré 1978 126 pages en format -12
Bon État
Payot 1973 in12. 1973. Broché.
Bon état couverture défraîchie ternie trace de pli sur le premier plat intérieur jauni propre
1928 Payot, Paris, 1928, Bibliothèque Scientifique. Un volume in 8° broché de 256 pages, très bon état. Frais d'envoi colissimo, 650
Très bon état Remises possibles sur les achats en lot, achetez plusieurs objets à la fois ! Reçoit sur rendez-vous pour consultation des ouvrages.
PAYOT. 1984. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 328 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 702-Ouvrages divers sur les beaux-arts et les arts décoratifs
Classification Dewey : 702-Ouvrages divers sur les beaux-arts et les arts décoratifs
Paris Denöel & Steele 1932 1 8° Broché 272 Denoël & Steele, Paris, 1932, Bibliothèque Psychanalytique. Un volume in 8° broché de 272 pages suivies de 8 pages de catalogue de l'éditeur sur papier de couleur. Frais d'envoi colissimo, 650
Etat neuf, non coupé. Remises possibles sur les achats en lot, achetez plusieurs objets à la fois ! Reçoit sur rendez-vous pour consultation des ouvrages.
PAYOT 1973 Soft Cover Fine
COLLECTION PETITE BIBLIOTHEQUE PAYOT N°211-11 CM X 18 CM-192 PAGES-COUVERTURE DE BENEDICTE DASTE-LEGERE PLIURE COIN SUP DR-(11A)
Payot , Petite Bibliothèque Payot Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1973 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché, sous couverture imprimée éditeur blanche, illustrée d'une figure en noir et blanc In-8 1 vol. - 189 pages
nouvelle édition en poche de 1973 "Contents, Chapitres : Avant-propos - 1. Le double : Le problème du moi - Le thème du double dans la littérature - Le dédoublement de la personnalité - L'ombre, représentation de l'âme - Le reflet, symbole du narcissisme - La conception dualiste de l'âme et le culte des jumeaux - La croyance à l'immortalité du Moi - 2. Don Juan : Le développement du personnage de Don Juan dans la littérature - La division de la personnalité en maitre et valet - Le héros et son double - Le convive de pierre - La crainte primordiale du talion - Le héros non idéalisé - Le rôle de la femme - L'explication psychologique par les poètes - La décadence du héros - Otto Rank (1884 - 1939) fut un psychologue et psychanalyste juif d'origine autrichienne. Il est un des premiers à avoir pratiqué ce que Freud appellerait l'analyse profane - Otto Rank est originaire de Vienne, issu d'un famille de la moyenne bourgeoisie juive. Fils de lartisan dart Simon Rosenfeld, il est contraint, dans un premier temps, de travailler lui-même comme artisan et de renoncer aux études supérieures. Il prend le nom Rank à l'âge de dix-neuf ans, en référence au bon Dr Rank de la pièce d'Ibsen, La Maison de poupée. Il lit à vingt ans L'Interprétation des rêves de Freud et écrit un essai que le psychanalyste Alfred Adler transmet à Freud. Il devient dès lors un psychanalyste du premier cercle et, en 1906, occupe le poste de secrétaire de la Société psychanalytique de Vienne. Soutenu par Freud, il reprend des études à partir de 1908 en littérature allemande et philologie classique à lUniversité de Vienne, où il est reçu docteur en 1912 pour son travail Die Lohengrinsage. Ses centres d'intérêt sont alors en particulier lhistoire culturelle et la mythologie, dans une perspective comparatiste. La même année, il fonde la revue Imago, avec Hanns Sachs. Il s'intéressait particulièrement aux mythes, aux religions, à la philosophie. Il est coopté comme membre du comité secret. - En 1924, il publie Le Traumatisme de la naissance, s'intéressant à ce qui se trouve avant le complexe d'dipe, et proposant une vision différente de celle de la psychanalyse d'orientation freudienne. Sigmund Freud l'analyse brièvement jusqu'à fin décembre 1924 puis le rejette ; Rank se trouve exclu des cercles psychanalytiques freudiens. En 1926, Rank s'installe à Paris, devenant l'analyste d'Henry Miller et d'Anaïs Nin, avec qui il a une courte liaison6. Il voyage en Amérique, où il rencontre un certain succès. Il est invité notamment à la société de Rochester pour la Protection de l'enfance en danger où travaille alors Carl Rogers. Il est exclu de l'association internationale de psychanalyse le 10 mai 1930 et meurt à 55 ans de septicémie en octobre 1939, à New York. (source : Wikipedia)" couverture un peu brunie avec deux petites taches sur les bords du plat supérieur, intérieur propre, papier légèrement jauni, cela reste un bon exemplaire - format de poche
Paris, Denoël et Steele, Bibliothèque psychanalytique, 1932. In-12, broché, 269 pp.
Photos sur demande.
Petite Bibliotheque Payot Broché D'occasion bon état 01/01/1973 150 pages
Paris Denoël et Steele, coll. "Bibliothèque psychanalytique" 1932 1 vol. broché in-12, broché, 269 pp. Edition originale française. Dos insolé et ridé. Sinon bon état.
Denoel & Steele.1932.In-8 br.269 p.BE.Dos insolé.Rares marques au crayon en marges.
Leipzig und Wien, Franz Deuticke, 1912. Gross-8°. Vortitelbl., VIII S., 1 Bl., 685 S. Originalhalbleinwand mit goldgeprägtem Lederrückenschild.
Grinstein 26461. - Erste Ausgabe. - Exemplar aus dem Besitz von Hans Christoffel mit Exlibris auf dem Innendeckel. Rückenschild beschabt. Am Kapital leicht bestossen.
Leipzig und Wien, Franz Deuticke, 1912. Vortitelbl., VIII S., 1 Bl., 685 S. Halbleinwand mit neuem Papierrücken- und Deckelschild.
Erste Ausgabe. - Einbandkanten schwach berieben. Sauberes Exemplar.
Leipzig, Wien, Zürich. Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag, 1924. Gross-8°. 4 Bl., 207 S., 1 S. Anzeigen. Originalbroschur.
"Internationale psychoanalytische Bibliothek Bd. XIV." - Grinstein 26508. - Erste Ausgabe. - Stehkante der Broschur mit kleinen Läsuren. Papier leicht gebräunt.
Leipzig, Wien, Zürich, Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag 1925. Gross-8°. 117 S., 3 S. Anzeigen. Originalbroschur.
Grinstein 26442. - Erste Einzelausgabe. - Erschien 1914 in "Imago" und in der ersten Auflage der "Beiträge zur Mythenforschung". - Rücken verblasst und am Kapital angerissen. Papier gebräunt. S. 7/8 mit 2 kleinen Einrissen im Rand.
Leipzig und Wien, Franz Deuticke 1928. 2 Bl., 104 S. Originalbroschur.
Erste Ausgabe. - Schönes Exemplar. - Selten.
Leipzig und Wien, Franz Deuticke 1927. VI, 166 S. Originalbroschur.
Erste Ausgabe. - Eine der seltensten Schriften Ranks. - Gutes Exemplar.
2 Teile in 1 Band. Leipzig und Wien, Franz Deuticke 1927-1928. VI, 166 S.; 3 Bl., 104 S. Leinwandband mit goldgeprägtem Rückentitel, Originalumschläge mit eingebunden.
Erste Ausgabe. - Beide Teile der seltenen Arbeit zusammengebunden. - Sehr schön erhalten.
2 Bände. Leipzig und Wien, Franz Deuticke 1927-1928. Gross-8°. VI, 166 S.; 3 Bl., 104 S. Neue gelbe Pappbände mit bedruckten Rückenschildern, Originalumschläge mit eingebunden.
Grinstein 26456 und 26455. - Erste Ausgabe. - Beide Teile der seltenen Arbeit. - Als Besprechungs-Stück bzw. Recensions-Exemplar gestempelt. - Die letzten 20 Seiten des ersten Teils mit einer Druckstelle im Text.