"... a valuable scholarly addition to any student of Freud or as research material in a library." —HNet, H-CAACA\ Davis argues that the visual dimension of Freud’s writing is crucial to understanding its structure and significance. He offers a new and challenging reading of Freud’s case study of Serge Pankejeff, the "Wolf Man." Much of the analysis revolved around Pankejeff’s childhood dream of wolves and a drawing of this dream he made for Freud.
"... a valuable scholarly addition to any student of Freud or as research material in a library." HNet, H-CAACADavis argues that the visual dimension of Freud's writing is crucial to understanding its structure and significance. He offers a new and challenging reading of Freud's case study of Serge Pankejeff, the "Wolf Man." Much of the analysis revolved around Pankejeff's childhood dream of wolves and a drawing of this dream he made for Freud.
List of IllustrationsPrefaceIntroductionIFreud and the Wolf Man1IIThe Wolf Dream22IIIThe Drawing of the Dream of the Wolves46IVPictures for Repression71VThe Homosexual Roots of Repression105VIFamily Trees141VIIIntersubjective Transformation183Appendix: Ruth Mack Brunswick's Draft for a Clinical Study of the Wolf Man215Notes221References Cited241Index257