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Paperback The Discovery of the Unconscious: The History and Evolution of Dynamic Psychiatry Book

ISBN: 0465016731

ISBN13: 9780465016730

The Discovery of the Unconscious: The History and Evolution of Dynamic Psychiatry

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Book Overview

The definitive history of psychiatry's origins

"A truly great book." --Dr. Jordan Peterson

The Discovery of the Unconscious is a monumental, integrated view of humanity's search for an understanding of the inner reaches of the mind. In an account that is both exhaustive and exciting, distinguished psychiatrist and author Henri Ellenberger demonstrates the long chain of development--through the exorcists, magnetists,...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A classic

For anyone interested in psychology, psychiatry, and psychotherapy - a must read, although it is a huge book. It spurred the overdue re-examination of the history of psychoanalysis and the decline of the psychoanalytic mythology that Freud spoon-fed to his followers. It also assisted in the rediscovery of the forgotten achievements of 19th century psychotherapy - hypnosis (animal magnetism or mesmerism), dissociation and hysteria (post-traumatic stress and multiple personalities), and the associated thinkers: Breuer, the young Freud, Nietzsche, Myers, Janet, Braid, and so on. For readers today, it also is a powerful andidote to the widespread and facile crutches of drugs, cookbook diagnostic categories, and misplaced biological analogies. Read it together with Adam Crabtree's From Mesmer to Freud.

Incredible Book

I am a Jungian analyst in training in Zurich, Switzerland. I can't recommend this book highly enough. It is extraordinarily well-researched, organized and written. The book unfolds with a subtle drama as all the roots of contemporary psychotherapy are slowly revealed. Analysts are fond of the conceit, "Freud discovered this," or "Jung discovered that." This book beautifully discloses the truth that Freud and Jung actually "discovered" very little. Rather, they skillfully organized and packaged ideas about the unconscious that had been in the air for some time. This book takes nothing away from Freud and Jung's achievements; rather it puts them firmly within their historical context and shows the discovery of the unconscious as a gradual unfolding of awareness instead of a eureka discovery by a handful of men. Ellenberger deserves our great thanks for this lifetime, tour de force work of his.

Astounding

Ellenberger's "The Discovery of the Unconscious" was a textbook for a graduate course I took in the philosophy of psychoanalysis. I remember admiring it while I read through it at the time and then setting it aside until the moment came to work my way through it again. The time having come, I worked through this massive book again, and it has aged quite well. Ellenberger surveys the entire history of the movement we know of as "dynamic psychiatry." The strength of the text, however, is Ellenberger's engaging and thoughtful portraits of the movement's key players: Janet, Freud, Adler, and Jung.I find myself drawn repeatedly to the portrait of Mesmer and his life and times. Mesmer remains one of the most fascinating figures in history to me, half a wizard and half an entertainer. In reviewing his life, it is almost impossible to separate fact from fiction. I know of no author who treats Mesmer as well as Ellenberger.Ellenberger's outstanding essay on Jung serves as a primary source for those interested in the interplay of Jung's personality and his ideas. Ellenberger reportedly had a close relationship with Jung and was able to have him personally review some of the material that served as early drafts of this chapter. The best part of Ellenberger's treatment of Jung is his reminder that Jung was a practical person and that Jungian therapy is often focused exclusively on the practical aspects of the patient's life and circumstances. All too often, there is a view of Jung as a mystic, allied with attempts to place his work in some New Age container. This inappropriate approach is contradicted by Jung's writing, teaching, and practice. In fact, only for some patients, mostly those in the second half of life who faced questions of meaning, would Jung begin with his synthetic-hermeneutic method. For patients dealing with commonplace neurotic symptoms, Jung often used an approach that Ellenberger describes as Adlerian: find out what life task the patient is trying to avoid and remove the obstacle. Ellenberger's reminder of Jung's essential groundedness is useful, as many of us either forget or ignore this aspect of Jung's theory and therapy. Another thread I found interesting is Ellenberger's treatment of the reasons that Jung rejected experimental psychology, in spite of having spent years working with the association test. Ellenberger does an excellent job of exploring how the personalities and preferences of each psychologist affected his work and theories. In Ellenberger's treatment of Adler, I found myself fascinated by how much we do not know of his life and of how many holes remain to be filled in. Perhaps because of my own predilections, I did not find the discussions of Janet and Freud all that interesting. This is a massive book. At first glance it seems intimidating. However, anyone with an interest in the exporers of the land known as the unconscious will find it an engaging read.

Monumental history of psychoanalysis

This book is the type of history that students rarely get to see. Textbooks tend to repeat the same old stories, many of which are only loosely based on the facts. This book goes into great depth, and even shows that many famous "cures" were nothing of the sort. This should be required reading for psychotherapists, and more importantly, for their clients.

The best available historic overview of depth psychology

Psychiatrist and historian Henri Ellenberger's monumental reconstruction of how depth psychology developed and flourished in our century is essential reading for psychotherapists and other psychoanalytically inclined readers. "Depth psychology" is that specialized branch of psychotherapy that concerns itself with the phenomenology of the "unconscious." Swiss psychiatrist Eugen Bleuler is, as Ellenberger explains, "commonly credited with having coined the [German term] Tiefenpsychologie (depth psychology)." The author points out, for instance, how the predominance during the nineteenth century of the organic or somatogenic model in psychopathology (which scientifically sought to replace medieval demonology with a more rational mythology) took a direct hit with the publication in 1895 of Studies on Hysteria by Freud and the Viennese physician Josef Breuer. Assimilating the findings of Franz Anton Mesmer, French physicians A.A. Liebault, Hippolyte Bernheim, Jean Charcot, and Pierre Janet--as well as psychological precursors like Kant, Nietzsche, Schopenhauer, C.G.Carus and Eduard von Hartmann--Freud and Breuer put forth a powerful argument for a psychogenic (or primarily psychological) model of mental illness, based on the hypothesized existence of the "unconscious." There are also substantial chapters covering the immense contributions of C.G. Jung and Alfred Adler among many others. In this day of "fast food" therapy, in which the unconscious is typically completely ignored, Ellenberger's classic study is a much-needed reminder of what the pioneering founders of psychotherapy discovered, and what we, their twenty-first- century offspring, cannot afford to forget.
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