|
|
John Gach Books, Inc. 10514 Marriottsville Road (Rear Building) PO Box 267 Randallstown, Maryland 21133 |
|
Section 3: Dreams and Sleep (R-Z)
Return to Gach Books home page
New Arrivals
Browse by Date of List
Search our online inventory
Inquire
Based on a two-part article published in 1865 in the New York Medical Journal entitled "On Sleep and Insomnia." Later vastly enlarged into Hammond's 1869 Sleep and Its Derangements. "Though originating as an article in a medical periodical, the book is addressed to the public as well as the profession" [Atwater Collection #1549—1878 printing of the 1869 book].Surgeon-General during the civil war (until he was dismissed), Hammond was a pioneer early American neurologist based in New York city. He wrote influential textbooks both on insanity and neurology and, in 1871, provided the first description of athetosis, sometimes referred to as "Hammond's disease."
An anthology of 250 dreams from 1730 B.C. to the 20th century.
Hill's first book, this is a popular exposition geared towards teachers and parents. A Scotsman, Hill was one of the first British educators to promote Freud's ideas. As head of the East London school district, he invited Anna Freud to give her first lectures in England in 1938. The two subsequently became lifelong friends. In 1971 he published Teaching and the Unconscious Mind, which Elizabeth Young-Bruehl called "a remarkable book" in her biography of Anna Freud.
Grinstein #14845. A non-psychoanalytic approach to dreams by an organic psychiatrist who pooh-poohed psychoanalysis as 'magical medicine'.
The 2nd printing has a new preface.
Includes Hartmann's "Psychoanalyse und Wertproblem"; Bertram Lewin's "Zur Geschichte der Gewissenpsychologie"; Zulliger's "'Roichtschäggeten.' Über einen Maskenbrauch"; Karl Langer's "Zur Funktion der jüdischen Türpfostenrolle"; Emil Simonson's "Über das Verhältnis von Raum und Zeit zur Traumarbeit"; Rene Allendy's "Psychoanalyse der Ahnungen"; Josef Friedjung's "Der kleine Politiker"; Fenichel's "Die 'lange Nase'"; Albrecht Schaeffer's "Geschichte eines Traumes. Ein Gespräch."
Contains abstracts of P. K. Anokhin "Convergence of Excitations on a Neuron as the Basis of Integrative Brain Activity"; Eccles "Integration of Information in the Cerebellum"; E. Gutman "The Trophic Function of the Nerve Cell"; Jouvet "Experimental Evidence for the Participation of Monoamines in Sleep Mechanisms"; F. Magni "Humoral and Neural Mechanisms in the Modulation of Flashing in Fireflies"; T. H. Bullock "Comparative Physiology of Sensory Systems: Problems of Meaning and Coding"; Moruzzi "Ascending Reticular System and Sleep Physiology"; Bogach "Electrical Activity of Smooth Muscles"; etc.
Contains Putnam's "Allgemeine Gesichtspunkte zur psychoanalytischen Bewegung"; Stärcke's "Aus dem Alltagsleben"; Ernest Jones' "Professor Janet über Psychoanalyse"; Sabina Spielrein's "Die Äußerungen des Ödipuskomplexes im Kindesalter"; Sadger's "Kleine Mitteilungen aus der psychoanlytischen Paxis"; Tausk's "Über eine besondere Form von Zwangsphantasien."
Contains Hermann's "Randbemerkungen zum Wiederholungszwant"; S. Feldmann's "Über das Erröten"; Schilder's "Über eine Psychose nach Staroperation"; Nachmannsohn's "Die Psychoanalyse eines Falles von Homosexualität".
Contains Helene Deutsch's "Zur Genese der Platzangst"; Sadger's "Über Depersonalisation"; Simmel's "Die psychoanalytische Behandlung in der Klinik"; Laforgue's "Zum Begriff der Verdrängung"; Burrow's "Die Laboratoriumsmethode in der Psychoanalyse"; Franz Cohn's "Analyse eines Falles von Straßenangst"; Hárnik's "Vom Widerstand gegen die Traumdeutung in der Analyse"; Fenichel's "Zum 'Merkbefehl'. Zur Angst vor dem Gefressenwerden"; Kovács' "Beispiele zur aktiven Technik".
Contains Wilhelm Reich's "Die charakterologische Überwindung des Öedipuskomplexes"; Hitschmann's "Wandlungen der Traumsymbolik" and papers by Eitingon, Boehm, Fenichel, et al.
Contains Federn's "Das Ichgefühl im Traume"; Winterstein's "Schuldgefühl, Gewissensangst und Strafbedürfnis"; Garma's "Realität und Es in der Schizophrenie"; Zulliger's "Prophetische Träume"; Helene Deutsch's "Über die weibliche Homosexualität"; Jacobssohn's "Lernstörungen beim Kinde durch masochistische Mechanismen".
- Contains Fenichel "Weiteres zur präödipalen Phase der Mädchen";
- Anny Angel "Einige Bemerkungen über den Optismismus";
- Behn-Eschenbuerg "Beiträge zur Vorgeschichte des Oedipuskomplexes";
- Kreyfuß "Der Fall Wieland";
- Barinbaum "Zum Problem des psychophysischen Zusammenhangs mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der Dermatologie";
- Bergler "Über einige noch nicht beschriebene Spezialformen der Ejakulationsstörung";
- Hermann "Die Verwendung des Begriffes 'aktiv' in der Definition der Männlichkeit".
Contains Brierly's "Die Affekte in der Theorie und Praxis"; Bálint's "Eros und Aphrodite"; Otto Isakower's "Beitrag zur Pathopsychologie der Einschlafphänomen" (the classic paper on hypnogogic phenomena); Hann-Kende's "Zur Übertragung und Gegenübertragung in der Psychoanalyse"; Riviere's "Zur Genese der psychischen Konflikte im frühen Lebensalter"; Wälder's "Zur Frage der psychischen Konflikte im frühen Lebensalter"; and Eidelberg's "Zur Genese der Platzangst und des Schreibkrampfes."
Includes Berglers "Instinct Dualism in Dreams" and "Transference and Love", pp. 160-201.
Jensen was from 1875 director of the Provinzial-Irrenanstalt Allenburg and from 1885 director of the Berliner Irrenanstalt Dalldorf.
Woolmer #260. 1,640 copies printed.
Special issue devoted to cognition and dream research.
Ress 1939-40 page 215.
Karmanova was Professor of Physiology and Head of the Laboratory of Comparative Physiology of Sleep at the Sechenov Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry, Leningrad.
Kleitman was Professor of Physiology at the University of Chicago.
The pioneering experimental study of sleep and the first of two important books on sleep by Kleitman and his associates in the Department of Physiology at the University of Chicago.Born in Kishinev Russia, Kleitman arrived in the USA in 1915 and became a naturalized citizen in 1918. After receiving his PhD summa cum laude from the University of Chicago in 1923, he joined the Department of Physiology there in 1925 (where he remained until his retirement in 1960) and founded the world's first sleep laboratory, for which he and his students designed and built most of the measuring instruments. Regarded as the father of sleep research. The present book was followed in 1939 by Sleep and Wakefulness, the first major textbook on sleep, a revised & enlarged edition of which appeared in 1953. In September 1953 Kleitman and one of his students, Eugene Aserinsky, reported the discovery of rapid eye movements (REMs) during sleep and suggested the association of these eye movements with dreaming. The discovery of REMs marked the beginning of modern sleep research, for it demonstrated that there were at least two major kinds of sleep and that sleep included active brain processes.
Ress & McGuire General Bibliography of C. G. Jung's Writings German-1935d, page 28. Jung's Geleitwort constitutes pages iii-vi. The book first appeared earlier in the same year as her University of Munich doctoral dissertation, titled Wandlungen in der Auffassung des Traumproblems von der Romantik bis zur Gegenwart.
Lincoln's doctoral dissertation taken under Seligman, this is the first general study of dreams and dreaming in preliterate cultures.
A semiotic dream theory based on Carnap, Morris, & Jung.
Lovell was Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of Sydney.
Contains chapters on dreams, somnambulism, and hypnotism.
OCLC locates copies only at NY Acad of Med and the Welch Medical Library.
9 papers on adolescence; 3 on clinical studies includig Isidore Ziferstein's "The Patient-Therapist Interaction in Soviet Psychiatry"; and papers by Ullman, Offenkrantz, Helen Lewis, Bonime, and Harley Shands on dreams.
Contains Pumplin-Mindlin's "Anna Freud and Erik H. Erikson"; H. Daidman's "Contributions of Sandor Rado to Psychodynamic Science"; Helda Bolgar's "Jean Piaget and Heinnz Hartmann"; Sheldon Selesnick's "Franz Alexander and Thomas French"; Russell Monroe's "Existential Development of Adaptational Dynamics"; Leon Salzman's "Sociopsychological Theories in Psychoanalysis"; Harry Harlow's "Behavioral Approaches to Psychiatric Theory"; Dement's "Experimental Dream Studies"; Bonime's "Role of Dreams in Psychoanalysis"; Stanley Feldstein's "Vocal Patterning of Emotional Expression"; Natalie Shainess's "Feminine Identity and Mothering"; Claude Miller's "A Post-Freudian View of the Negative Therapeutic Reaction"; Curt Boenheim's "A Group Training Method in Transference"; Marmor's "Psychoanalytic Therapy and Theories of Learning"; and several other papers.
Containns Robert Holt's "Beyond Vitalism and Mechanism: Freud's Concept of Psychic Energy"; Robert White's "Competence and the Growth of Personality"; Jack Rubins's "Self-Awareness and Body Image, Self-Concept and Identity"; Harmon Ephron's "Ego Functioning in Rapid Eye Movement Sleep: Implications for Dream Theory"; Aaron Karush's "Ego Strength: An Unsolved Problem in Ego Psychology"; Edwin Weinstein's "Symbolic Aspects of Ego Function"; G. Chrzanowski's "The Independent Roots of Ego Psychology and Their Therapeutic Implications"; W. Gadpaille's "The Analyst as Auxiliary Ego in the Treatment of Action-Inhibited Patients"; Salo Rosenbaum's "Symbolic Meaning and Theoretical Significance of the Analytic Couch."
22 papers including Charles C. Dahlberg's "LSD as an Aid to Psychoanalytic Treatment"; Paul Hoch's "The Combination of Psychotherapy with Drug Therapy"; Joseph Jaffe's "Electronic Computers in Psychoanalytic Research"; Herbert Spiegel's "The Dissociation-Association Continuum"; I. Markowitz et al.'s "An Investigation of Parental Recognition of Children's Dreams: A Preliminary Report"; 10 papers on violence and warfare including Eibl-Eibesfeldt's "Aggressive Behavior and Ritualized Fighting in Animals," Leonard Berkowitz's "Aggressive Stimuli, Aggressive Responses and Hostility Catharsis," Lewis Coser's "Violence and the Social Structure," Margaret Mead's "Violence in the Perspective of Culture History."
Contains Edmund Jacobson's "Electrophysiology of Mental Activities and Introduction to the Psychological Process of Thinking"; Allan Rechtshaffen's "The Psychophysiology of Mental Activity during Sleep"; R. W. Sperry's "Lateral Specialization of Cerebral Function in the Surgically Separated Hemispheres"; William W. Grings' "The Role of Consciousness and Cognition in Autonomic Behavior Change"; Ralph Hefferline et al.'s "Hallucinations: An Experimental Approach"; McGuigan's "Electrical Measurement of Covert Processes as an Explanation of 'Higher Mental Events'"; and other papers.
13 papers in French and 3 in English.
With a 73 item bibliography.
University of Amsterdam doctoral thesis.
Munsell was president of Illinois Wesleyan 1857-1875. In a brief discussion of this and two other textbooks of psychology published around the same time Fay notes that "[t]hese are good textbooks. The material is well organized, and presented attractively with a keen sense for the teaching situation. The content is Scottish realism, and the psychology is content to be descriptive" [Psychology Before William James, p. 151]. The typical Scottish-realist three-part division into the intellect, sensibility (sensation & emotion), and will. Contains separate chapters on consciousness and sleep.
Papers by Starobinski, Grinstein, Anzieu, Ella Sharpe, André Green, Isakower, Bertram Lewin, Pontalis, Rosolato, Khan, et al. on dreams.
Section 1: Dreams and Sleep (A-G)
Section 3: Dreams and Sleep (R-Z)
Return to Gach Books home page
New Arrivals
Browse by Date of List
Search our online inventory