This article analyses Sigmund Freud’s reflections on war and violence, especially in his two main works on this issue: Thoughts for the Time of War and Death (1915) and Why War? (1932). After presenting these two essays and placing them in their historical contexts, I briefly review what authors have written about them in recent years. I then attempt to contribute something new to the discussion by examining four of Freud’s propositions: his justification for disillusionment caused by war; his suspicion about peoples and states; his denunciation of the primitivism and hypocrisy of human beings; and his determination to maintain hope in culture and history. I consider these key points of Freud’s essays separately, showing their importance fo...
The effect of World War One on Freud is well known, yet its relation to The Uncanny (1919) remains m...
The paper sketches the context in which Einstein and Freud’s joint publi-cation Why War? appeared un...
This article proposes to reflect on the relevance of the Freudian text 1915 - “Thoughts for the time...
WAR AND HUMAN NATURE. SIGMUND FREUD’S REFLECTIONSThe present analysis is based on the assumpti...
Freud and war, Peter Gay The question of Freud's relation to war is really two questions that ultima...
The article “Freud on the First World War (Part 1)” by Jasna Koteska analyzes the birth of psychoana...
Sigmund Freud has much to say about the subject of war and death in his later work, written after 19...
FUKS, Betty Bernardo. Da guerra e da morte. Temas da atualidade. de Sigmund Freud: um século depois....
In 1915, a few months after the outbreak of the 1st World War, Sigmund Freud writes the essay Zeitge...
Freud’s correspondence duringWorld War I, also known as theGreat War, reveals the effects thewar had...
Abstract: Freud’s theory of psychoanalysis grew out of work with individuals, yet increasingly he wr...
This essay seeks to explicate an intuition shared by Freud and Derrida: how technological hyper-soph...
This essay will compare and contrast the theories of Sigmund Freud and René Girard, particularly tho...
During World War I, Sigmund Freud and his followers held a special symposium in Budapest entitled P...
Freud�s correspondence during World War I, also known as the Great War, reveals the effects the war ...
The effect of World War One on Freud is well known, yet its relation to The Uncanny (1919) remains m...
The paper sketches the context in which Einstein and Freud’s joint publi-cation Why War? appeared un...
This article proposes to reflect on the relevance of the Freudian text 1915 - “Thoughts for the time...
WAR AND HUMAN NATURE. SIGMUND FREUD’S REFLECTIONSThe present analysis is based on the assumpti...
Freud and war, Peter Gay The question of Freud's relation to war is really two questions that ultima...
The article “Freud on the First World War (Part 1)” by Jasna Koteska analyzes the birth of psychoana...
Sigmund Freud has much to say about the subject of war and death in his later work, written after 19...
FUKS, Betty Bernardo. Da guerra e da morte. Temas da atualidade. de Sigmund Freud: um século depois....
In 1915, a few months after the outbreak of the 1st World War, Sigmund Freud writes the essay Zeitge...
Freud’s correspondence duringWorld War I, also known as theGreat War, reveals the effects thewar had...
Abstract: Freud’s theory of psychoanalysis grew out of work with individuals, yet increasingly he wr...
This essay seeks to explicate an intuition shared by Freud and Derrida: how technological hyper-soph...
This essay will compare and contrast the theories of Sigmund Freud and René Girard, particularly tho...
During World War I, Sigmund Freud and his followers held a special symposium in Budapest entitled P...
Freud�s correspondence during World War I, also known as the Great War, reveals the effects the war ...
The effect of World War One on Freud is well known, yet its relation to The Uncanny (1919) remains m...
The paper sketches the context in which Einstein and Freud’s joint publi-cation Why War? appeared un...
This article proposes to reflect on the relevance of the Freudian text 1915 - “Thoughts for the time...