Karl Abraham: 5 books

Book cover of Dreams and Myths

Dreams and Myths

A Study in Race Psychology

by Karl Abraham, William A. White
Language: English
Release Date: October 23, 2016

Karl Abraham investigated child sexual trauma and, like Sigmund Freud, proposed that sexual abuse was common among psychotic and neurotic patients. Furthermore, he argued (1907) that dementia praecox is associated with child sexual trauma, based on the relationship between hysteria and child sexual...
Book cover of The Complete Correspondence of Sigmund Freud and Karl Abraham 1907-1925
by Karl Abraham
Language: English
Release Date: November 7, 2018

Karl Abraham was an important and influential early member of Freud’s inner circle of trusted colleagues. As such he played a significant part in the establishment of psychoanalysis as a recognised and respected discipline. Regarded by Ernest Jones as one of the best clinical analysts among his...
Book cover of Clinical Papers and Essays on Psychoanalysis
by Karl Abraham
Language: English
Release Date: November 9, 2018

This book is a collection of the works of Dr. Karl Abraham's writings. It covers the sexual trauma in childhood for the symptomatology of dementia praecox, the significance of intermarriage between close relatives in the psychology of the neuroses, psycho-analysis, and a study in folk-psychology.
Book cover of Selected Papers on Psychoanalysis
by Karl Abraham
Language: English
Release Date: March 26, 2018

Covering a wide range of topics, the collection consists of twenty-six papers and essays published over a period of two decades. Readers of this book are thus enabled to trace the analyst's development, in which his scientific approach is evident throughout, from his earliest papers through to his...
Book cover of An Unfinished Revolution

An Unfinished Revolution

Karl Marx and Abraham Lincoln

by Abraham Lincoln, Karl Marx, Raya Dunaevskaya
Language: English
Release Date: May 16, 2011

Karl Marx and Abraham Lincoln exchanged letters at the end of the Civil War, with Marx writing on behalf of the International Working Men’s Association. Although they were divided by far more than the Atlantic Ocean, they agreed on the urgency of suppressing slavery and the cause of “free labor.”...
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