Article
The American Journal of Psychoanalysis (2008) 68, 103–116. doi:10.1057/ajp.2008.2
Freud, His Illness, and Ourselves
Paper presented at the Clinical Sándor Ferenczi Conference, August 2–6, 2006, Baden-Baden, Germany.
André Haynal1
Correspondence: André Haynal, M.D., 5 bd Philosophes, CH-1205 Geneva, Switzerland. e-mail: andre.haynal@freesurf.ch
1André Haynal, M.D., is past president of the Swiss Psychoanalytical Society and former Vice President of the European Psycho-Analytical Federation, Professor of Psychiatry (Emeritus), University of Geneva, Switzerland, Training and Supervising Analyst, Swiss Psychoanalytic Society.
Abstract
The history of Freud's illness shows that he tried to avoid confrontation with it, and to treat it as unimportant. In his personal letters, the ill body remains outside—as another person, "Konrad," not he himself—and it is not taken into account. Particularly in Freud's correspondence with Ferenczi, we realize to what extent certain phenomena, especially depressive ones, he considered somatic, with a tendency to dismiss them, and this despite important occasional insights, such as about the role played by hate in psychosomatic illnesses. In the post-Freudian development, these topics have been more and more integrated in the dialogue, in the discourse between the analyst and the analysand.
Keywords:
Freud's physical illness, history of psychoanalysis, psychosomatic medicine, psychoanalytic dialogue
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