Helene Deutsch

Helene Deutsch , born Helene Rosenbach with Przemyśl (Poland) the October 9th 1884 and died with Cambridge (Massachusetts) the March 29th 1982, is a American psychoanalyst of Austrian origin. It was the first psychoanalyst to be specialized in female psychology.

She studied the Psychiatrie with Emil Kraepelin. Analyzed at Sigmund Freud, it was essential on Vienna like one of large the analysts of its generation. Today, one wrongfully reproaches him for having defended the orthodoxe position freudienne on female sexuality and to have failed in the treatment of Victor Tausk. It contributed an important share to the theory of the personalities “ ace yew ( like if )”, worked out later by Donald Winnicott (“ false self-service ”), and it posed one of the first stones being studied of the “borderline case”.

Works

  • Psychoanalysis of the sexual functions of the woman (1925). French translation: PUF, 1994
  • Psychology of the women (1944-1945). French translation by Hubert Benoit (1948-1949). Republication: PUF-Quadridge, 1997
  • Problems of the Adolescence (1967). French translation: Payot, 2003
  • Autobiography (1973). French translation: Mercure de France, coll 1001 Women, 1986,
  • the Untraceable ones of Helene Deutsch. Clinical cases and self-analysis (1818-1830) , Threshold, 2000
  • the Personalities ace yew. “Like if” and other new texts , Threshold, 2007

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