Jason Aronson, Inc.
Pages: 180
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7657-0600-3 • Hardback • October 2009 • $103.00 • (£79.00)
978-0-7657-0721-5 • eBook • October 2009 • $93.00 • (£72.00)
Robert Langs, M.D. is the author of forty-seven books written on the basis of his innovative approach to the human mind and to psychotherapy, psychoanalysis, and the human condition. His focus on the unconscious experience of and adaptations to reality and its death-related traumas places him in a unique position to to retell the interrelated stories of Freud's early-life traumas and the psychoanalysis he created with a freshness that brings new insights and wisdom to both biographical investigations and the broad field of dynamic psychology.
Chapter 1. Is Freud to be Trusted?
Chapter 2. Paradigms and Archetypes
Chapter 3. A Tale of Two Paradigms
Chapter 4. The Descendants of Freud's Two Paradigms
Chapter 5. Freud in Conflict
Chapter 6. Psychoanalytic Detective Work
Chapter 7. Freud's Early Traumas
Chapter 8. The Ultimate Trauma
The latest thought-provoking book from the pen of Robert Langs, MD, prolific and provocative psychoanalytic author and thinker, shows us not only how Freud pushed psychoanalysis over the edge but how during a serious crisis in his life Freud stood at the edge of a precipice from which he could have easily jumped to his death. Langs gives us a brilliant analysis of how Freud's life shaped his revolutionary theories about trauma, seduction, and the Oedipus complex.
— Zvi Lothane M.D., Author of In Defense of Schreber: Soul Murder and Psychiatry
Robert Langs honors the father of psychoanalysis, by applying Freud's original, trauma and reality based theory, to Freud's life and writings. He uncovers the unconscious forces which drove Freud's decision to abandon this first theory in favor of one based on inner needs and fantasies?a tragic but survival based decision. He points out the effects as well, which have been passed down through generations of analysts. Analysts today can make a different decision. Langs adds the Adaptive Approach, based onand extending Freud's original theory to our range of choices. This book is a departure for Langs in tone and style. The voice is graceful and the tone is sombre. It has the pace of an intriguing and meticulous detective story with a complex arc, leading to a crescendo at the finish. The author also takes an unprecedented step by inviting the reader to accompany him on a journey of discovery, rather than attempting to penetrate the reader with an irrefutable truth. Langs beckons and is curious, along the way, asking readers to listen with their unconscious minds, and then look at and perhaps share their responses with him. This is a unique, startling, and indispensable book about Freud, psychoanalysis, and the hidden truths of human life.
— Cate Nelson, MFT
Robert Langs honors the father of psychoanalysis, by applying Freud's original, trauma and reality based theory, to Freud's life and writings. He uncovers the unconscious forces which drove Freud's decision to abandon this first theory in favor of one based on inner needs and fantasies—a tragic but survival based decision. He points out the effects as well, which have been passed down through generations of analysts. Analysts today can make a different decision. Langs adds the Adaptive Approach, based on and extending Freud's original theory to our range of choices.This book is a departure for Langs in tone and style. The voice is graceful and the tone is sombre. It has the pace of an intriguing and meticulous detective story with a complex arc, leading to a crescendo at the finish. The author also takes an unprecedented step by inviting the reader to accompany him on a journey of discovery, rather than attempting to penetrate the reader with an irrefutable truth. Langs beckons and is curious, along the way, asking readers to listen with their unconscious minds, and then look at and perhaps share their responses with him. This is a unique, startling, and indispensable book about Freud, psychoanalysis, and the hidden truths of human life.
— Cate Nelson, MFT