Cäcilie M.
Cäcilie M. (Anna von Lieben, born Anna von Tedesco; c. 1847–1900) is the pseudonym of one of Freud's first patients, whom he called in 1890 his "principal client" and in 1897 his "instructress".[1]
Life
Born into a rich Austrian Jewish family, Anna von Lieben was referred to Freud in the late eighties for help with a long-standing series of nervous disorders. After referring her for a consultation with Charcot, Freud treated her (with some short-term success) through hypnotism, taking her with him to see Hippolyte Bernheim in 1889 in the (unsuccessful) hope that he might be able to work a permanent cure.[2] He also used abreaction for temporary relief of her symptoms,[3] noting, however, that her sense of guilt and self-reproaches would swiftly return after the treatment sessions.[4]
Her symptoms, including hallucinations and physical spasms, provided the basis for many of Freud's claims about conversion hysteria; and how to interpret back from physical symptom or hallucination to the underlying (symbolic) emotional meaning it expressed,[5] often by a "punning" logic.[6]
Criticism
Freud's later critics have argued that his continuing treatment of Anna, given awareness of her incurability, amounted to using her as a kind of cash-cow.[7]
Freud continued during the six years of psychoanalysis to treat her continuously with injections of morphine without any success or therapeutic result.[8]
See also
- Anna O.
- Franz Brentano (her brother-in-law)
- Robert von Lieben (her son)
- Somatization disorder
- Studies on Hysteria
- Talking cure
References
- ^ Peter Gay, Freud: A Life for Our Time (1988) p. 69
- ^ Ernest Jones, The Life and Work of Sigmund Freud (1964) p. 211
- ^ Herman Westerink, A Dark Trace: Sigmund Freud on the Sense of Guilt (2009) p. 12
- ^ Malcolm Macmillan, Freud Evaluated: The Completed Arc (1991) p. 106
- ^ Joseph Schwartz, Cassandra's Daughter (2003) pp. 51-52
- ^ Mignon Nixon, Fantastic Reality: Louise Bourgeois and a Story of Modern Art (2005) pp. 138-139
- ^ Fouad Bishay Michael, Ingenious Nonsense: Religion, Philosophy, Pseudoscience, and the Paranormal (2012) p. 80
- ^ Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen (2011). Les patients de Freud. Destins. Éditions Sciences Humaines
Further reading
- Peter J. Swales, "Freud, his Teacher, and the Birth of Psychoanalysis", in Paul E. Stepansky, ed., Freud, Appraisals and Reappraisals, vol. 1 (1986) 3-82