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John Gach Books, Inc. 10514 Marriottsville Road (Rear Building) PO Box 267 Randallstown, Maryland 21133 |
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Contains essays on sublimation, Freud's ideas about the curative process in psychoanalysis, oceanic feeling, phylogeny & ontogeny, the death instinct.
By an Argentine psychoanalyst.
OCLC records only one copy, at the University of Michigan. Universidad Nacional de Buenos Aires medical thesis. Aubrun reports the results of sectioning the craniofacial and trigeminal nerve in cats.
OCLC records 4 copies: NYU; NY Public; Southern Methodist Univ; Univ of Wisconsin.
OCLC records only Columbia HS Library and Countway.
The most prominent Latin American psychiatrist, Delgado published the first Spanish language paper on psychoanalsis; introduced psychoanalysis to South America; was the first in Latin America to use malarial treatment for GPI, which he described in a widely cited article published in English in 1922; pioneered the use of various forms of shock treatment and was among the first to employ the new psychotropic drugs in the 1950s; was the first in Latin America to use imipramine in the treatment of depressive states.
Dimitri was adjunct professor of clinical neurology at the Faculty of Medicine of Buenos Aires.
OCLC records only 1 copy, at Yale.
Endara was Professor of Clinical Psychiatry and Neurology at the Central University of Ecuador.
OCLC records a few copies of Endara's 1954 book with virtually the same title but none of this earlier pamphlet. Endara was professor of clinical psychiatry and neurology at the Central University of Ecuador.
Not in OCLC (though there is a copy of his 1993 book on Freud at UCLA).
OCLC records 6 libraries: NY Acad Med, Regis Univ, Univ of Iowa Hardin Library, Univ of Chicago, NLM, and the National Library of Chile.
Grinstein 11422. OCLC records only the NLM copy.
Though not obvious from the title, entirely devoted to empirical and rational psychology.
Gonzáles Serrano was a Krausist who explained his idea of the soul as an energy or teleological entelechy different from the body and capable of an activity of its own between excitation and response, having both receptivity and spontaneity. He deemed the new psychophysics as implying a poorly grounded monist position. He published books in philosophy, logic, psychology, education, and sociology, as well as a book on Goethe.
OCLC locates 5 copies: 2 at Texas, 2 in France, & 1 in Argentina. An early (the first?) South American book on feigned insanity. Note that OCLC has his name as "Ingenieros."An Argentine philosopher and psychaitrist, Ingeneiros introduced positivism to Argentina and presented a behaviorist approach to psychology two years before John Watson did. He founded the Revista de Filosofia in 1915; the main characteristics of his psychological system were naturalism, evolutionism, and the use of the genetic method. See Sciacca Philosophical Trends in the Contemporary World, p.649.
Spanish translation not in OCLC.
Spanish translation not in Grinstein. The first book on analytic technique published in Spanish.
The first book explicitly on technique. A prime mover for early American psychoanalysis, Jelliffe founded The Psychoanalytic Review, the first analytic journal in English, and published the earliest English translations of German psychoanalysis in his Nervous and Mental Disease Monograph Series.
Not in OCLC. Translation of Somatic Treatments in Psychiatry, NY: 1961, the 3rd revised and expanded edition of Shock Treatments (1946), the 1952 2nd edition of which was translated into Spanish in 1953, also by Teixidor.
OCLC locates copies only at NLM and Univ of Calif Berkeley.
OCLC locates only two copies, both in Brazil.
OCLC locates only one copy, at the Chilean National Library. So far as we can determine, not a translation of an Italian book but a selection of Lombroso's essays on crime, and criminal justice. Contains chapters on love & suicide; love & crime; wine & crime; a defense of the school of positive criminology; illusions of jurists about prisons; judicial errors and the skill of alienists.
Both authors were anatomists on the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Valladolid.
South American first-person account of psychiatric hospitalization and treatment presented as a novel.
Not in OCLC.
Contains Palacios's "Pro qué Freud descubrió el psicoanálisis"; Grinberg et al.'s "La influencia de Cervantes sobre el futuro creador del psicoanálisis"; Roberto Castro's "Sigmund Freud, nuestro Sófocles moderno"; and papers by Pontón, Elena Fernández, Julio Casillas, Alfredo Valencia, Jaime Villareal, Hernán Santacruz, José Cueli, and Fernando Cesarman.
Originally published in 1901 as the first part of Cajal's Recuerdos de mi vida, both parts of the final 1923 edition of which were translated into English as Recollections of My Life.
16 chapters including "El diablo ante la psiquiatría"; "Un inca andaluz"; "Descartes y Claudio Bernard"; "Una visita a Freud"; "De Bergson a Freud."
OCLC locates only 5 copies; in North America only NLM & McGill.
OCLC locates only 1 copy, at NLM. Translated into English in 1950 as Introduction to Psychosomatic Medicine.
OCLC locates 5 copies: LC, NLM, Univ Pittsburgh, 2 in the Netherlands. Study of mental health in rural Andalusia. Serva Diaz was chairman of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Zaragoza.
26 paper in Spanish and 11 in English, virtually all devoted to epilepsy and temporal lobe convulsions. Contributions by Ajuriaguerra and Walter Freeman.
Traces psychological descriptions in published fables (Bruyère, La Fontaine, etc.) of domestic animals (cats, dogs, bulls, sheep, etc.).
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