Academic literature on the topic 'Psychoanalysts – Germany (West) – Biography'

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Journal articles on the topic "Psychoanalysts – Germany (West) – Biography"

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Seidler, Christoph. "East goes West — West goes East: border crossing and development." Group Analysis 52, no. 2 (January 11, 2019): 172–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0533316418819957.

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In the aftermath of the Nazi era and the Second World War the ‘Bloodlands’ of Eastern Europe including Germany were left with a pervasive and significant loss of empathy. Robi Friedman speaks of the ‘Soldier’s Matrix’ (2015), in which dehumanizing dissociation increases, and empathy, guilt and shame disappear. In the GDR (German Democratic Republic)—under totalitarian and authoritarian conditions—this state of emotional deficit persisted for longer than in the Federal Republic (BRD). Gradually, but only after reunification, could change in the whole of Germany become possible. In the following text I will review the fragmented state of psychoanalysis in the battered city of Berlin after the Second World War. I describe the predicament of psychoanalysts, who are hopelessly entangled in adaptation processes, fearing the new rulers and dreading their own conscience. Despite their weakened sense of courage, they were however able to create space for freedom of thought. I intend to convey the trajectory of that process. The GDR history, despite the experience of confinement, is also a story of opening. Specific developments within the borders enabled the preservation as well as the transportation of psychoanalytic thought: some examples can be seen in inpatient forms of psychotherapy, individual psychodynamic therapy and especially the Intended Dynamic Group Psychotherapy (IDG). The opening of the ‘Wall’ made profound psychoanalytic post-qualification possible, but it came at a cost to the specific developments of the health system in the East. Within this system group therapists took their own particular path. After several years of cautious rapprochement the founding of BIG (Berlin Institute for Group Analysis) could be negotiated and established in 2003, supported by all Institutes of Berlin belonging to the umbrella organization of the DGPT (German Society for Psychoanalyse, Psychotherapy, Psychosomatic). Nine years later the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Gruppenanalyse und Gruppenpsychotherapie (D3G) consolidated in the merger of several individual groups resulting in a continuous and refreshingly pluralistic cooperation today. This article will therefore describe a series of societal shifts, transitions, internal and external attempts to heal, that are well reflected within the parallel process visible in the development of group analysis and its practitioners. One example to consider would be the asymmetry between psychoanalytic ‘teachers’ (West) and ‘students’ (East) and the dynamics experienced during professional encounters, which were very particular and rather complicated. However, that is a chapter in itself and will be considered separately.
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Troebst, Stefan. "“On Trying To Be a Historian of Eastern Europe”: A Migratory Interim Balance. Part 1." Slavic World in the Third Millennium 16, no. 1-2 (2021): 243–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2412-6446.2021.16.1-2.11.

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This autobiographic (and thus highly subjective) text asks what motived a non-East European, born in 1955 in West Germany, to become a historian of Eastern Europe. The answers are, on the one hand, an interest in (Slavic) languages and (Cold War) politics, and, to a lesser extent, family background, and on the other, coincidence and, not the least, fellowship opportunities. Part 1 of the article traces the author’s biography from his high-school years in Baden-Württemberg to universities and research institutions in Tübingen, West Berlin, Sofija, Skopje, and Bloomington, Indiana, from 1969 to 1981 – including his first modest academic achievements. Part 2 covers his professional path till retirement in 2021.
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Richter, Saskia. "Petra Kelly, International Green Leader: On Biography and the Peace Movement as Resources of Power in West German Politics, 1979-1983." German Politics and Society 33, no. 4 (December 1, 2015): 80–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/gps.2015.330407.

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This article uses the biography of the activist and Green Party co-founder Petra Kelly in order to rethink the Greens' founding process and to articulate a new conception of charismatic political leadership. It shows how Kelly used her activism in the new social movements as the basis for her leadership role in the Greens, and how her ongoing work in the peace movement provided her a means of maintaining power within the nascent party during the early 1980s. By examining Kelly's contributions to the Greens' approach to politics, the article shows that she was more than just a figurehead for the new party. Most importantly, the article shows that throughout her career as an activist and politician, Kelly used her biography to establish credibility and to support her unique style of charismatic leadership. The German public's response to Kelly reveals the influence of this charismatic leadership and shows how her movement-driven and biographically informed approach, which brought personal experiences and emotions into politics, was part of a larger transformation of the political in West Germany during the 1970s and 1980s.
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von der Goltz, Anna. "Making sense of East Germany’s 1968: Multiple trajectories and contrasting memories." Memory Studies 6, no. 1 (January 2013): 53–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1750698012463893.

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This article investigates contrasting memories of East Germany’s 1968 based on a sample of six life story interviews. Given the iconic events of West Germany’s 1968, there has been a growing interest in the events happened on the other side of the Iron Curtain. In unified Germany, however, commemorations of 1968 in the German Democratic Republic have focused on a particular type of 68er biography: those who broke with the regime as a result of the Warsaw Pact’s invasion of Czechoslovakia on 21 August 1968 and chose to pursue various forms of opposition in its wake. This article lends more nuance to the subject by examining three individuals who chose this path alongside three others who followed a different trajectory. The crushing of the Prague Spring and their own imprisonment for protesting against it led the latter to shun open opposition in favour of pursuing change from within official structures. By highlighting the plurality of East German experiences and memories of this period, this article seeks to make a contribution both to the study of the international 1968 and to the thriving scholarship on how the East German past is remembered in united Germany.
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Roos, Julia. "An Afro-German Microhistory: Gender, Religion, and the Challenges of Diasporic Dwelling." Central European History 49, no. 2 (June 2016): 240–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008938916000340.

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AbstractThis article traces the biography of an Afro-German woman born during the 1920s Rhineland occupation to examine the peculiarities of the black German diaspora, as well as potential connections between these peculiarities and larger trends in the history of German colonialism and racism. “Erika Diekmann” was born in Worms in 1920. Her mother was a German citizen, her father a Senegalese French soldier. Separated from her birth mother at a young age, Erika spent her youth and early adulthood in a school for Christian Arab girls in Jerusalem run by the Protestant order of the Kaiserswerth Deaconesses (KaiserswertherDiakonissen). After World War II, Erika returned to West Germany, but in 1957, she emigrated to the United States, along with her (white) German husband and four children. Erika's story offers unique opportunities for studying Afro-German women's active strategies of making Germany their “home.” It underlines the complicated role of conventional female gender prescriptions in processes of interracial family-building. The centrality of religion to Erika's social relationships significantly enhances our understanding of the complexity of German attitudes toward national belonging and race during the first half of the twentieth century.
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Troebst, Stefan. "On Trying To Be a Historian of Eastern Europe”: A Migratory Interim Balance. Part 2." Slavic World in the Third Millennium 16, no. 3-4 (2021): 165–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2412-6446.2021.16.3-4.10.

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This autobiographic (and thus highly subjective) text asks what motived a non-Eastern European, born in 1955 in West Germany, to become a historian of Eastern Europe. The answers are, on the one hand, an interest in (Slavic) languages and (Cold War) politics, and, to a lesser extent, family background, and, on the other, coincidence and the opportunities for fellowship. Part 1 of the article traced the author’s biography from his high-school years to his first modest academic achievements. Part 2 covers his professional path till retirement in 2021 – leading not only to universities like Uppsala, Hamburg, and finally Leipzig, but also into international institutions outside academia, such as the Slavic Unit of the British Military Government of Berlin, the CSCE / OSCE missions of long-duration in Macedonia and Moldova (in particular in the Dnestr region and Gagauzia), and – as founding director – to the Danish-German European Centre for Minority Issues (ECMI) in Flensburg.
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Hanstein, Michael. "Der Poet als unbeugsamer Dissident." Daphnis 46, no. 4 (October 17, 2018): 560–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18796583-04604001.

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In 1977 the East German author Hans Joachim Schädlich published Versuchte Nähe (English edition Approximation published in 1980), a small volume of short stories. While the Western German press praised Schädlich’s first work as a literary reflection of the society in the German Democratic Republic (GDR), Schädlich was marginalized as a dissident in the GDR and had to move to West Germany. One of the short stories in Versuchte Nähe is about the last days of the German renaissance author Nicodemus Frischlin, who, arrested by German authorities, died in prison. The story was appreciated for its style using a “Luther-like language”. Schädlich’s story is mainly based on a biography of Frischlin written by David Friedrich Strauss, a famous and prolific 19th century German author and theologian. Schädlich’s modification of the original source includes a description of the conditions of imprisonment and the heroification of Frischlin as an uncompromising critic of a totalitarian regime.
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Dąbrowska, Magdalena. "Beate Barbara Juliane von Krüdener o podróżach i w podróżach po Europie." Studia Rossica Gedanensia, no. 9 (December 31, 2022): 40–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.26881/srg.2022.9.02.

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Beate Barbara Juliane von Krüdener about journeys and on journeys across Europe The paper presents the problem of travelling on the basis of the novel “Valérie” and the volume “The Memories of Childhood and Youth” by Beate Barbara Juliane von Krüdener (1764–1824). Krüdener was a French-language writer, born in Riga, belonging to the honourable family of Baltic Germans, who, at the end of her life, was an advisor to Alexander I. The paper consists of five parts: “Who was she?” (the writer’s biography) “On the Baltic Sea” (a picture of Denmark in “Valérie” and Livonia in the memories), “In Saint Petersburg” (a picture of Russian tsars), “Towards the West” (a picture of Denmark and Italy in “Valérie” and Germany, France, England in the memories) and “The Conclusion” (the concept of a “Russian European”). Krüdener’s journeys were of intellectual type (meeting with political and cultural elites of Europe, participation in cultural life). Northern Europe (cold and melancholic) is contrasted with southern Europe (warm and cheerful).
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Kangira, Jairos. "Editorial note." Journal of African Languages and Literary Studies 1, no. 3 (December 1, 2020): 5–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.31920/2633-2116/2020/v1n3a0.

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The themes of colonisation and decolonisation dominate in this issue of JoALLS. The colonisation of African communities by European forces was so inhuman and brutal that it left skeletons of African people littered in affected areas on the continent. The trails of murder, massacre, plunder and displacement of defenceless and innocent Africans by marauding, bloodthirsty colonialists are unsavory, heart-rending and disgusting. The crucial role literature plays in documenting the trials and tribulations of Africans cannot be overemphasized. The historical novel and (auto) biography have always become handy in this regard, although caution should be taken on which perspective they are framed. As you read this issue, you will realise that the words 'Germans' and 'genocide' are what linguists call 'collocates'; in other words, you cannot talk of one of these two words without the other as the Germans' heinous crimes were meant to decimate the Herero and Nama populations of Germany South West Africa, now Namibia. The violence against the indigenous African people was not only frightening but also sickening.
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Tomelleri, Vittorio. "From the History of Ossetian Studies: The Correspondence Between Georgij (Gappo) V. Baev and Giorgi Akhvlediani." Vestnik Volgogradskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Serija 2. Jazykoznanije, no. 6 (March 2021): 92–122. http://dx.doi.org/10.15688/jvolsu2.2020.6.8.

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After his emigration to the West, Georgij (Gappo) Baev (1865–1939), an outstanding cultural figure in Prerevolutionary Ossetia, spent many years in Germany, where he was involved in the translation of biblical texts into Ossetic and also taught his mother tongue as a lecturer at the Berlin Oriental Seminary (1922–1939). In the manuscript department of the Berlin State Library his personal archive is kept, containing a lot of interesting material, a real treasure of information not only about his personal life, but also and above all on Ossetic culture and history. The present paper features his correspondence with the Georgian linguist Giorgi Akhvlediani (1887–1973), whose personal archive is housed at the Tbilisi State University. The so far unpublished letters and postcards cover a relatively short time frame, namely from the 8 th of September 1927 to the 16 th of October 1928. Besides showing the deep respect and sincere appreciation of the two former colleagues for each other, the texts, all written in Russian, provide interesting facts which shed more light upon their biography and scientific activity. All in all, the professional and at the same time friendly correspondence, being a significant contribution to Ossetic studies, provides an insight into the nostalgic mood of the emigrant, on the one hand, and the interested tone of his counterpart, on the other.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Psychoanalysts – Germany (West) – Biography"

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DEHLI, Martin. "Medizin zwischen Wissenschaft und politik : eine biographische Studie über den deutschen Arzt, Psychoanalytiker und Gesellschaftskritiker Alexander Mitscherlich (1908-1982)." Doctoral thesis, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/5750.

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Defence date: 25 October 2004
Examining Board: Prof. Peter Becker (IUE) - supervisor ; Prof. John Forrester (University of Cambridge) ; Prof. Michael Hagner (ETH Zürich) - external supervisor ; Prof. Peter Wagner (IUE)
PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digitised archive of EUI PhD theses completed between 2013 and 2017
PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digitised archive of EUI PhD theses completed between 2013 and 2017
Die biographische Selbstdarstellung eines der wichtigsten intellektuellen Stichwortgeber der frühen Bundesrepublik wird einer kritischen Überprüfung unterzogen. Der Arzt, Psychoanalytiker und Sozialpsychologe Alexander Mitscherlich (1908-1982) hat mit seinen politischen Stellungnahmen und sozialpsychologischen Analysen das intellektuelle Profil der Bundesrepublik maßgeblich geprägt. Werke wie »Auf dem Weg zur vaterlosen Gesellschaft« oder »Die Unfähigkeit zu trauern« stehen noch heute für wichtige Entwicklungen und Stimmungslagen der westdeutschen Gesellschaft in der Nachkriegszeit. Anhand von bisher unveröffentlichtem Material entwirft Martin Dehli die Biographie Mitscherlichs vor dem Hintergrund der deutschen Geschichte des 20. Jahrhunderts: Sie führt von den nationalrevolutionären Zirkeln um Ernst Jünger und Ernst Niekisch im Berlin der frühen dreißiger Jahre über Exil und Gefangenschaft nach Heidelberg und Frankfurt, von wo aus Mitscherlich sein Wirken entfaltete. Mitscherlich erscheint nicht als Ikone bundesrepublikanischen Selbstverständnisses, sondern in all der Widersprüchlichkeit, die einer Gründerfigur in einer Zeit des Übergangs zu eigen ist: in all dem Facettenreichtum und der Unmittelbarkeit, die Mitscherlichs politischem und wissenschaftlichem Wirken das Gewicht verliehen und so seinen Beitrag zur Modernisierung der deutschen Wissenschaft und Gesellschaft erst möglich gemacht haben.
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Books on the topic "Psychoanalysts – Germany (West) – Biography"

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Im Getümmel der Welt: Alexander Mitscherlich, ein Porträt. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2008.

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M, Schreiber Anke, ed. The lives of Erich Fromm: Love's prophet. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2013.

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Müller, Thomas. Von Charlottenburg zum Central Park West: Henry Lowenfeld und die Psychoanalyse in Berlin, Prag und New York. Frankfurt am Main: Edition Déjà-vu, 2000.

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Bailey, George. Germans: The biography of an obsession. New York: Free Press, 1991.

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Fritz, Sänger, ed. Die Volksvertretung: Handbuch des deutschen Bundestags. Rheinbreitbach: Neue Darmstädter Verlagsanstalt, 1985.

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In der Pflicht: Lebensbericht eines deutschen Soldaten im 20. Jahrhundert. Herford: E.S. Mittler, 1989.

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Scholz, Günther. Die Bundespräsidenten: Biographien eines Amtes. Heidelberg: Decker & Müller, 1990.

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Albrecht, Horst. Im Dienst der Inneren Sicherheit: Die Geschichte des Bundeskriminalamtes. Wiesbaden: Bundeskriminalamt, 1988.

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Peter, Karl. Acht Glas: Ende der Wache : Erinnerungen eines Seeoffiziers der Crew 38. Reutlingen: Preussischer Militär-Verlag, 1989.

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Frank, Gerhard. Mein Leben und die Fliegerei. Niebüll: Videel, 2004.

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