Five Card Story: Sigmund Freud: The Founder of Physchoanalysis

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a Networked Narratives story by Group 9 HM1J- Khiene,Angelyn, Omni,Stickymoi created Sep 27 2022, 03:49:29 pm. Create a new one!


flickr photo credits: (1) laurakgibbs (2) cogdogblog (3) Mind on Fire Photography (4) cogdogblog (5) laurakgibbs


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Sigmund Freud was an Austrian neurologist who is perhaps most known as the founder of psychoanalysis. Freud developed a set of therapeutic techniques centered on talk therapy that involved the use of strategies such as transference, free association, and dream interpretation. Freud was born in the Austrian town of Freiberg, now known as the Czech Republic, on May 6, 1856.
When he was four years old, Freud’s family moved to Vienna, the town where he would live and work for most of the remainder of his life. After studying medicine at the University of Vienna, Freud worked and gained respect as a physician. Through his work with respected French neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot, Freud became fascinated with the emotional disorder known as hysteria.
Later, Freud and his friend and mentor Dr. Josef Breuer introduced him to the case study of a patient known as Anna O., who was really a woman named Bertha Pappenheim. Her symptoms included a nervous cough, tactile anesthesia, and paralysis. Over the course of her treatment, the woman recalled several traumatic experiences, which Freud and Breuer believed contributed to her illness.The two physicians concluded that there was no organic cause for Anna O's difficulties, but that having her talk about her experiences had a calming effect on the symptoms. Freud and Breuer published the work Studies in Hysteria in 1895. It was Bertha Pappenheim herself who referred to the treatment as "the talking cure."
Later works include The Interpretation of Dreams (1900) and Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality (1905). These works became world-famous, but Freud’s theory of psychosexual stages has long been a subject of criticism and debate. While his theories are often viewed with skepticism, Freud’s work continues to influence psychology and many other disciplines to this day.
Freud also influenced many other prominent psychologists, including his daughter Anna Freud, Melanie Klein, Karen Horney, Alfred Alder, Erik Erikson, and Carl Jung. His work and writings contributed to our understanding of personality, clinical psychology, human development, and abnormal psychology.

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