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Reviews for A Psychology of Difference: The American Lectures

 A Psychology of Difference magazine reviews

The average rating for A Psychology of Difference: The American Lectures based on 2 reviews is 5 stars.has a rating of 5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2010-04-24 00:00:00
1996was given a rating of 5 stars Belinda Sprunkel
Otto Rank's ideas influenced many therapists and broke new ground in philosophy, art, education, and religion. Since his untimely death in 1939 his influence has grown through the work of Carl Rogers, Rollo May (who wrote the introduction), Ernest Becker, Anais Nin, Irvin Yalom, Esther Menaker, and John Bowlby. With an excellent introduction by Robert Kramer, this book,brings together Rank's lectures to US audiences. The lectures are more readable than his densely written books. Some of the titles: "Development of the Ego," "Emotional Suffering and Therapy," "Social Adaptation and Creativity," "The Prometheus Complex," "Neurosis as a Failure in Creativity," and "Significance of the Love life." Kramer provides helpful reference and explanatory notes. This is a book for anyone interested in psychology, psychotherapy, child development, life-fear and death-fear, guilt, will, and freedom.
Review # 2 was written on 2020-01-13 00:00:00
1996was given a rating of 5 stars Scott Newlon
This is an anthology of a baker's dozen of essays by scholars on Freud and his ideas: Freud and how he related to London (ego) and Paris (id), Freud and the "Seduction Theory," Freud and cognitive science, on the Interpretation of Dreams, the Unconscious, the Oedipus Complex, Perversion, the Superego, on women, art, anthropology, civilization, and on a critique of psychoanalysis. This is not a book I picked up, or would have picked up, on my own volition. It was a required book for--of all things--a political science course I took in college and a requirement within the major. Professor Fermon was a fantastic teacher--but I admit, having taken more than one class with her, she had a Freud fetish and readings from him would crop up in the strangest places. But then she was very much a feminist, and I notice that the one part of the book marked up was Chodorow's essay, "Freud on Women." And of everything I've read about or by Freud (plenty thanks to Professor Fermon), I have to admit I find his theories on women to really be howlers. Here's a snippet of that essay: Freud describes for us a variety of traits that characterize women and that he attributes entirely to penis envy and women's lack of a penis: shame at her body; jealousy, which results directly from envy itself; a lesser sense of justice resulting from the weak female superego that never forms because the girl does not fear castration and does not therefore give up oedipal longings or internalize sexual prohibitions; narcissism and vanity, as the self-love that men center on their penis becomes defensively diffused throughout the female body. As a women, I have to agree with Chodorow that Freud's theories on women are more valuable as a inadvertently revealing look into the male psyche rather than the archetypal female mind--or at least the male psyche as formed in the Victorian Age. As for the other essays, I found a lot of material repetitive from essay to essay and so filled with academic jargon that it's impossible to claim they were good reads or that I found them illuminating. Freud aficionados might disagree. Maybe. The truth is I find Freud himself a more lively, interesting writer than any of the commentators on him in this anthology.


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