Encyclopedia, Difference between revisions of "Sándor Ferenczi" - New World

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[[Image:Hall Freud Jung in front of Clark 1909.jpg|thumb|Ferenczi, furthest right in the back row, with [[Sigmund Freud]], [[Stanley G. Hall]], [[Carl Jung]], and others in front of [[Clark University]] in 1909.]]
 
[[Image:Hall Freud Jung in front of Clark 1909.jpg|thumb|Ferenczi, furthest right in the back row, with [[Sigmund Freud]], [[Stanley G. Hall]], [[Carl Jung]], and others in front of [[Clark University]] in 1909.]]
'''Sándor Ferenczi''' ([[July 16]], [[1873]] – [[May 22]], [[1933]]) was a Hungarian [[Psychoanalysis|psychoanalyst]].
 
 
Born in [[Miskolc]], [[Hungary]], in his works he came to believe that his patients' accounts of [[Sexual abuse#Child sexual abuse|sexual abuse as children]] were truthful, having verified those accounts through other patients in the same family. This, among other reasons, resulted in a break with [[Sigmund Freud]].
 
 
Prior to this break he was a member of the inner circle of psychoanalysis and was notable for working with the most difficult of patients and for developing a theory of more active intervention than is usual in psychoanalytic practice.  He has found some favor in modern times among the followers of [[Jacques Lacan]], a French psychoanalyst, as well as among [[relational psychoanalysis|relational]] psychoanalysts in the United States.  Relational analysts read Ferenczi as anticipating their own clinical emphasis on mutuality ([[intimacy]]), [[intersubjectivity]], and the importance of the analyst's [[countertransference]].
 
 
== Further reading ==
 
 
<cite>Ferenczi's Turn in Psychoanalysis</cite>, Peter L. Rudnytsky, New York University Press, 2000, Paperback, 450 pages, ISBN 0814775454
 
 
<cite>Final Contributions to the Problems & Methods of Psycho-Analysis</cite>, Sandor Ferenczi, H. Karnac Books, Limited, Hardback, 1994, ISBN 1855750872.
 
 
<cite>Development of Psychoanalysis (Classics in Psychoanalysis, Monograph 4)</cite>, [[Otto Rank]] and Sandor Ferenczi, International Universities Press, Inc, 1986, Hardback, ISBN 0823611973.
 
 
<cite>First Contributions to Psycho-Analysis</cite>, Sandor Ferenczi, translated by [[Ernest Jones]], H. Karnac Books, Limited, 1994, Hardback, ISBN 1855750856.
 
 
<cite>Sandor Ferenczi: Reconsidering Active Intervention</cite>, Martin Stanton, Jason Aronson Publishers, 1991, Hardcover, 1991, ISBN 0876685696.
 
 
<cite>Thalassa: A Theory of Genitality</cite>, Sandor Ferenczi, H. Karnac Books, Limited, 1989, Paperback, ISBN 0946439613.
 
 
<cite>Legacy of Sandor Ferenczi</cite>, Edited by Adrienne Harris and Lewis Aron, Analytic Press, 1996, Hardback, ISBN 0881631493.
 
 
<cite>Triad: the physicists, the analysts, the kabbalists</cite>, Tom Keve, [[Rosenberger & Krausz]], London, 2000, ISBN 0953621901.  (http://www.rosenbergerandkrausz.com/)
 
 
== External links ==
 
 
* [http://home.earthlink.net/~hypolyte/ Ferenczi Institute]
 
* [http://www.psikeba.com.ar/recursos/autores/ferenczi.htm Sandor Ferenczi en Psikeba Revista de Psicoanalisis y Estudios Culturales]
 
 
  
  
 
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Revision as of 13:15, 8 July 2006


Ferenczi, furthest right in the back row, with Sigmund Freud, Stanley G. Hall, Carl Jung, and others in front of Clark University in 1909.


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