Paris, Grasset, 1933. In-8, broché, 251 pp.
Photos sur demande.
Wien, Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag 1919. Gross-8°. S. 203-242. Ohne Einband. Klammerheftung.
Grinstein 28713. - Erste Ausgabe. - Dieser Aufsatz wurde von Sachs 1924 in seine "Gemeinsame Tagträume" übernommen. - Mit handschriftlicher Widmung des Verfassers vom Juli 1919 auf der ersten Seite. - Rücken mit mehreren Einrissen.
Lpz., Wien, Zür, Int. Psych. Verlag, 1924. No frontwr. 185 pp. (Imago- Bücher V).
Wien, Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag 1936. 8°. 122 S., 1 S. Inhalt. Originalbroschur mit Schutzumschlag.
Grinstein 28688. - Erste Ausgabe. - Eine der letzten Veröffentlichungen vor der Emigration und deshalb selten. - Mit handschriftlichem Besitzvermerk des Basler Psychoanalytikers Hans Christoffel auf dem Umschlag. - Umschlag leicht fleckig. Rücken gebräunt.
Wien, Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag 1932. 150 S., 5 Bl. Mit einer Titelzeichnung und 2 Abbildungen auf 1 Tafel. Originalleinwand mit illustriertem Schutzumschlag.
Zweite, im Titel leicht veränderte Ausgabe. - Die ersten Auflage erschien 1930 in nur 2000 Exemplaren bei Julius Bard in Berlin. - Schutzumschlag mit winzigen Einrissen, sonst annähernd neuwertig. So schön selten.
Berlin, Julius Bard Verlag 1930. 207 S. Mit einer Titelzeichnung von Hans Aufseeser und 4 Tafeln. Originalleinwand mit Schutzumschlag mit einer Zeichnung von Aufseeser.
Erste Ausgabe.- Gedruckt in 2000 Exemplaren. - Der seltene Schutzumschlag stark berieben, mit Einrissen- und Abrissen. - Mit dem Umschlag selten.
In-8 broché sous couverture à rabats, Denoël, coll. "Freud et son temps", 1977, 174 pp. Déchirures aux charnières supérieures, dos un peu ridé, intérieur propre. Exemplaire de lecture pour ce titre peu courant. Poids 250 g. Envoi lettre verte. Frais d'envoi 6,30 euros sur la France, 14,55 euros pour l’étranger (tarifs de base hors envois suivis). Possibilité de remise en mains propres sur Paris, possibilité d’envoi MONDIAL RELAY, n'hésitez pas à me contacter avant de passer commande. Twitter : @Pontneuf06.
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
Leipzig Wien Zurich 1927 Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag Hardcover
Imago Zeitschrift für Anwendung der Psychoanalyse auf die Natur- und Geisteswissenschaften band XIII 1927 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 1927, six parts hard cover With gilded titles on the spine, 24,5 x 18 cm,553 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 1928 Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag Hardcover
Imago Zeitschrift für Anwendung der Psychoanalyse auf die Natur- und Geisteswissenschaften band XIV 1928 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. hard cover With gilded titles on the spine, 24,5 x 18 cm,551 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 1928 Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag Hardcover
Imago Zeitschrift für Anwendung der Psychoanalyse auf die Natur- und Geisteswissenschaften band XV 1929 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. hard cover With gilded titles on the spine, 24,5 x 18 cm,542 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
Wien 1930 Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag Hardcover
Imago Zeitschrift für Anwendung der Psychoanalyse auf die Natur- und Geisteswissenschaften band XVI 1930 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. 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
Wien 1931 Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag Hardcover
Imago Zeitschrift für Anwendung der Psychoanalyse auf die Natur- und Geisteswissenschaften band XVII 1931 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. 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