A Cultural Citizen of the World: Sigmund Freud's Knowledge and Use of British and American Writings
Book Details
Author(s)S. S. Prawer
PublisherLegenda
ISBN / ASIN190654042X
ISBN-139781906540425
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,384,729
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Based on an intensive study of the original German text of Freud's writings, letters and journals, S. S. Prawer's new book is the first to make a full and systematic map of Freud's use of English literature. The great psychoanalyst has long been acclaimed as a polymath, as a practical doctor who was also a theoretician, as a writer of non-fiction which was also a counterpoint to the great novels of the early twentieth century, and as an essayist who, like Montaigne, absorbed all of the cultural world around him. Freud was fascinated by writings from many nations and languages, and his use of English shows the great range of his reading: from Shakespeare to Bernard Shaw, Henry Fielding to George Eliot, Mark Twain to Thornton Wilder; from scientific works by Maxwell and Darwin to the economics of Adam Smith, Malthus and Keynes, and from psychology and anthropology to the origins of religion. Though Freud's genius was unique, his sense of being a citizen of a world far wider than Vienna was not, and it can tell us much about the exchange of ideas across national and linguistic frontiers. Though he was a reader par excellence, he was also a case study in how world literature can be used by men and women who are not professional literary scholars or critics -- and of how much it can come to mean to them, and for their sense of who they are. Siegbert Prawer is a Fellow of the British Academy, Professor Emeritus of German Literature and a Fellow of the Queen's College, Oxford.

