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Freud: A Life for Our Time

Freud: A Life for Our Time
Freud- A Life for Our Time (1988 edition).jpg
Cover of the first edition
Author Peter Gay
Cover artist Mike McIver
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Subject Sigmund Freud
Published 1988 (J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd)
Media type Print (Hardcover and Paperback)
Pages 810 (1995 edition)
ISBN (1995 edition)

Freud: A Life for Our Time is a 1988 biography of Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, by historian Peter Gay. The work is based partly on new material that has become available since the publication of Ernest Jones' The Life and Work of Sigmund Freud (1953). The book has been praised, but has also been criticized by several authors skeptical of psychoanalysis.

Gay writes that, "As a historian, I have placed Freud and his work within their various environments: the psychiatric profession he subverted and revolutionized, the Austrian culture in which he was compelled to life as an unbelieving Jew and unconventional physician, the European society that underwent in his lifetime the appalling traumas of war and totalitarian dictatorship, and Western culture as a whole, a culture whose sense of itself he transformed out of all recognition, forever."

Gay criticizes Freud for sentimentalizing the emotional tie between a mother and her son, writing that Freud's observation that the relation of mother to son is the only lasting intimate relationship that does not conceal a sediment of hostile feelings, "sounds far more like a wish than a sober inference from clinical material." At the end of the book, Gay provides a bibliographical essay evaluating works dealing with Freud and psychoanalysis. He describes Elizabeth M. Thornton's The Freudian Fallacy (1983) as "a model in the literature of denigration". He credits philosopher Adolf Grünbaum, in The Foundations of Psychoanalysis (1984), with discrediting Karl Popper's argument that psychoanalysis is a pseudo-science.

A best-selling book, Freud: A Life for Our Time has been widely translated. The work has been praised by philosophers Jerome Neu and Richard Wollheim, both of whom compare it to Jones's The Life and Work of Sigmund Freud (1953). Wollheim observes that while Gay, unlike Jones, did not suffer from the limitation of being able to write only what Anna Freud found acceptable, his freedom as a scholar was nevertheless restricted by the policies of the Freud Archives. Wollheim writes that Gay tries to integrate Freud's life and thought, including only as much of Freud's thought as necessary to understand his life. Wollheim credits Gay with excellent insight into the events of Freud's time. Christopher Badcock, writing in 1992, called the work the best up-to-date biography of Freud. Richard H. Armstrong credits Gay with "extraordinary narrative skills".


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