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John Gach Books, Inc. 10514 Marriottsville Road (Rear Building) PO Box 267 Randallstown, Maryland 21133 |
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Section 3: Dreams and Sleep (R-Z)
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Contains Kleitman's "The Sleep-Wakefulness Cycle"; ZIlboorg's "Psychoanalytic Concepts of Sleep and Dreams"; Henry K. Beecher's "Perception of Pain annd Some Factors That Modify It"; Margaret Brenman's "The Phenomena of Hypnosis"; and Hudson Hoagland's "Consciousness and the Chemistry of Time."
OCLC locates 4 copies: 2 in Germany and Duke & NY Public Library.
Contains Lewellys Barker's "The Relations of Internal Medicine to Psychiatry"; E. S. Abbott's "What Is Paranoia?"; Thomas Salmon's "General Paralysis as a Public Health Problem"; Adolf Meyer's "Differential Diagnosis of General Paresis"; Meyer Solomon's "A Contribution to the Analysis and Interpretation of Dreams Based on the Motive of Self Preservation"; Charles Ricksher's "Similar and Dissimilar in Relatives"; Guy Williams' "An Intoxication Psychosis Associated with Cirrhosis of the Liver"; S. N. Clark's "Atypical Modes of Onset in Dementia Praecox".
Contains George Mora's "The History of Psychiatry: A Cultural and Bibliographical Survey" with discussion by E. G. Boring; Erikson's "Eight Ages of Man"; E. L. Hartmann's "The D-State: A Review and Discussion of Studies on the Physiologic State Concomitant with Dreaming"; Shneidman's "Orientations Toward Death: A Vital Aspect of the Study of Lives"; Ivanov's "A Soviet View of Group Therapy"; Myer Mendelson's "Psychological Aspects of Obesity"; Vaillaint's "The Prediction of Recovery in Schizophrenia"; and several other papers.
One of the first important Jungian books written in English. Jung's medical assistant in Zurich, Baynes introduced analytical psychology to Britain and started the Jungian Analytical Psychology Club in London. Together with his second wife, Cary, he translated many of Jung's early publications into English.
"An important early study on the role of a woman's hormones and sexual cycle on the dream and its function" [Parsifal-Charles. The Dream: 4,000 Years of Theory and Practice.
First published as "Le rêve" in Bull. de l'Institut General Psychologique, 1901, 97-122, this is Bergson's major presentation of his theory of dreams.
OCLC locates 9 copies. Bjerre was the first prominent Swedish psychoanalyst.
Hunter & Macalpine pp. 1058-1062. Translation of the 1852 revised second edition ofDes Hallucinations, first published in 1845. A British edition appeared in 1859 as On Hallucinations.The first substantial psychiatric treatise on hallucinations, a term introduced to medical psychology only twenty years earlier by Esquirol. Believing they constitute a disease sui generis, Brierre de Boismont attempts to reclaim the subject for psychology from medical pathology. He discusses the occurrence of hallucinations in ordinary life, examines the hallucinations of dreams and nightmares and the their occurrence in animal magnetism, somnambulism, and ecstasy. The latter part of the book discusses the causes, symptomatology, and treatment. Widely read, his book influenced everyone writing about the subject after him.
Hunter & Macalpine pp. 1058-1062 (using and preferring Hulme's translation to the 1853 American edition). First American edition of the Hulme translation, published in 1859 in London.
Contains Nathaniel Kleitman's "The Basic Rest-Activity Cycle and Physiological Correlates of Dreaming"; Allan Rechtschaffen's "Dream Reports and Dream Experiences"; Ralph J. Berger's "When Is a Dream Is a Dream Is a Dream?"; David Foulkes' "Nonrapid Eye Movement Mentation"; William C. Dement's "Possible Physiological Determinants of a Possible Dream-Intensity Cycle"; Arthur Shapiro's "Dreaming and the Physiology of Sleep: A Critical Review of Some Empirical Data and a Proposal for a Theoretical Model of Sleep and Dreaming"; Anthony Kales & Allan Jacobson's "Mental Activity during Sleep: Recall Studies, Somnambulism, and Effects of Rapid Eye Movement Deprivation and Drugs"; Mary A. B. Brazier's "Absence of Dreaming or Failure to Recall?"; M. B. Sterman's "Relationship of Intrauterine Fetal Activity to Maternal Sleep Stage"; Raul Hernández-Péon's "Neurophysiology, Phylogeny, and Functional Significance of Dreaming."
OCLC records only 5 copies: Meadville-Lombard Theol Schl; Rutgers; Kent State; and the Universities of Chicago & New Orleans. Apparently no copies are in American medical libraries. Each title with a separate title-page and pagination. Reissued later by Andrus in Hartford, CT with a number of printings between 1841 and 1851. The last incarnation of this combination text was in 1859 in Louisville, KY under the cover title "Illustrated Treasury of Science, Art and Family Literature" (with Jethro Jackson's text on General Literature, Science and Art added).The De Stael work includes her essay "Reflection upon Suicide." The full separate title for Foster's work is Essays in a Series of Letters, on the Following Subject: On a Man's Writing Memoirs of Himself. On Decision of Character. On the Application of the Epithet Romantic. On Some of the Causes by which Evangelical Religion has been Rendered Less Acceptable to Persons of Cultivated Taste. Both Macnish titles issued together here are of some consequence in the history of psychiatry (the respective first dates being 1830 & 1827).
Corning was a member of the NY Neurological Society. Contains chapters on sleep and the hygienics of sleep, blood and brain-force, insomnia, exhaustion of brain energey, significance of excessive or inadequate blood supply to the brain, mechanical regulation of cerebral circulation, baths, electricity.
Desoille developed a method of psychotherapy based on the use of waking dreams. This is his first published book and his first book on the subject.
The proceedings of a symposium held in Mexico City in August 1977.
1972 City University of New York doctoral dissertation.
Grinstein 10703. 1st issue with "copyright 1920" instead of "Introduction copyright 1921".
A plagiarized anthology of Eder's translation of On Dreams and Brill's translation of The Interpretation of Dreams.
2nd issue with the change from "copyright 1920" to "Introduction copyright 1921" and with '1921' on the titlepage.
Facsimile reprint of the 1913 first edition in English.
First US printing of the Strachey translation.
Grinstein #10497; Norman Catalog F78; Norman Freud Catalog 46.
The first psychoanalytic biography and the first application of psychoanalysis to art history. 1,500 copies were printed.
Grinstein #10685. Contains seven previously published papers on dreams: Märchenstoffe in Träumen - Ein Traum als Beweismittel - Traum & Telepathie - Bemerkungen zur Theorie und Praxis der Traumdeutung - Die Grenzen der Traumdeutung - Die sittliche Verantwortung für den Inhalt der Träume - Die okkulte Bedeutung des Traumes.
Grinstein #10497.
Grinstein #10497.
First US appearance of the Strachey translation.
GM #10614. First edition of the second French translation of Traumdeutung, Legros' translation having appeared in 1925.
Grinstein #10614; Norman Catalog F33; Norman Freud Catalog #23; Horblit 32; PMM #389; GM 4980; Heirs of Hippocrates 2176.Actually published November 4, 1899 in an edition of 600 copies. Along with Das Kapital and The Origin of the Species, The Interpretation of Dreams transformed twentieth-century ideas & mores. "Freud's greatest book, the influence of which has been felt far beyond the psychiatric and medical community. Here he refined his understanding of the operation of the unconscious, interpreted dreams on the basis of wish-fulfillment theory, discussed displacement, the extensive appearance of symbols for repressed thought in conscious thought, regression, and the erotic nature of dreams" [GM].
Grinstein 10614; Norman Catalog F36 (this copy).
Grinstein 10614; Norman Catalog F37 (this copy). Extensively revised, the third edition contains (as a result of Stekel's influence) much new material on symbolism.
Grinstein 10614; Norman Catalog F37 (in wrappers).
Grinstein 10614; Norman Catalog F38 (this copy). The 4th edition, for the revision of which Rank was largely responsible, is the first with Rank's contributions two essays added ("Traum und Dichtung"—Dreams and Creative Writing—and "Traum und Mythus"—Dreams and Myths). These were left out of the eighth (the last revised by Freud) and all subsequent editions.
Grinstein 10614; Norman Catalog F38 (this copy).
Grinstein 10614; Norman Catalog F40.
Grinstein 10614; Norman Catalog F41. The penultimate revised edition of Freud's masterpiece. Rank's essays first appeared in the 4th edition.
Grinstein 10614; Norman Catalog F41.
Grinstein 10614. Photolithographic reprint of the 7th revised edition of Freud's masterpiece. Rank's essays first appeared in the 4th edition.
Grinstein #10610. Freud's condensation of Traumdeutung.
Grinstein #10610.
6 papers in French, 27 in English. Sections onthe neurophysiological & neurochemical basis of sleep; insomnias; narcolepsies & related disorders; episodic sleep phenomena & their pathological intensifications (dreams excluded).
Outcome of a 1985 American Academy of Psychoanalysis seminar. Includes papers by Fosshage, Ramon Greenberg, Palombo, Bonime, Warner, and Ullman.
Contains Grünbaum's "Free Will and the Problem of Human Nature"; Globus's "The Problem of Consciousness"; Rothenberg & Hausman's "Creativity: A Survey and Critique of Major Investigations"; Rubinstein's "On the Role of Classificatory Processes in Mental Functioning"; Rosen's "The Nature of Verbal Interventions in Psychoanalysis"; Jean Schimek's "The Parapraxis Specimen of Psychoanalysis"; Luborsky & Mintz's "What Sets Off Momentary Forgetting"; Gottschalk's "The Psychoanlytic Study of Hand-Mouth Approximations"; Mahler's On the First Three Subphases of the Separation-Individuaion Process"; Fred Pines's "Libidinal Object Constancy: A Theoretical Note"; Charles Fisher et al.'s "A Psychophysiological Study of Nightmares and Night Terrors: I. Physiological Aspects of the Stage 4 Night Terror"; Harry Fiss et al.'s "'Dream Intensification' as a Function of Prolonged REM-Period Interruption"; Umbarger's "Problems in the Psychology of Dreaming: A Review of the Work of Richard Jones"; Thomas Anders's "An Overview of Recent Sleep and Dream Research"; Eugen Bär's "Understanding Lacan."
An expansion of chapter two of the author's Psychoanalysis in the Classroom.
Section 2: Dreams and Sleep (H-Q)
Section 3: Dreams and Sleep (R-Z)
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