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Freud's Schreber Between Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis (Record no. 1137)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 01701 a2200277 4500
001 - CONTROL NUMBER
control field 1855758830
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
control field 20250317100400.0
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION
fixed length control field 250312042011GB eng
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 9781855758834
037 ## - SOURCE OF ACQUISITION
Source of stock number/acquisition Taylor & Francis
Terms of availability GBP 37.99
Form of issue BB
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
Original cataloging agency 01
041 ## - LANGUAGE CODE
Language code of text/sound track or separate title eng
072 7# - SUBJECT CATEGORY CODE
Subject category code MKMT
Source thema
072 7# - SUBJECT CATEGORY CODE
Subject category code JMAF
Source thema
072 7# - SUBJECT CATEGORY CODE
Subject category code MMJT
Source bic
072 7# - SUBJECT CATEGORY CODE
Subject category code JMAF
Source bic
072 7# - SUBJECT CATEGORY CODE
Subject category code PSY000000
Source bisac
072 7# - SUBJECT CATEGORY CODE
Subject category code PSY036000
Source bisac
072 7# - SUBJECT CATEGORY CODE
Subject category code 616.89
Source bisac
100 1# - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Thomas Dalzell
245 10 - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Freud's Schreber Between Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis
Remainder of title On Subjective Disposition to Psychosis
250 ## - EDITION STATEMENT
Edition statement 1
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC.
Place of publication, distribution, etc. Oxford
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. Routledge
Date of publication, distribution, etc. 20110315
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent 422 p
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC.
Expansion of summary note This book investigates what was distinctive about the predisposition to psychosis Freud posited in Daniel Paul Schreber, a presiding judge in Saxony's highest court. It argues that Freud's 1911 Schreber text reversed the order of priority in late nineteenth-century conceptions of the disposing causes of psychosis - the objective-biological and subjective-biographical - to privilege subjective disposition to psychosis, but without returning to the paradigms of early nineteenth-century Romantic psychiatry and without obviating the legitimate claims of biological psychiatry in relation to hereditary disposition. While Schreber is the book's reference point, this is not a general treatment of Schreber, or of Freud's reading of the Schreber case. It focuses rather on what was new in Freud's thinking on the disposition to psychosis, what he learned from his psychiatrist contemporaries and what he did not, and whether or not psychoanalysts have fully received his aetiology.

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