Book contents
- Wounded Healers
- Advance Praise for Wounded Healers
- Wounded Healers
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Fin-de-Siècle Vienna
- 1 Sometimes a Cigar Is Just a Cigar
- 2 A Most Dangerous Method
- 3 We Are Abel: We Are Cain
- 4 Fear of Death and Trauma of Birth
- 5 From Character Analysis to Cloud Busting
- 6 Ernest Jones
- 7 Estranged Brilliance
- 8 When Freud Met Tiffany
- 9 Phoenix Forever
- Part II From Sea to Shining Sea
- References
- Index
3 - We Are Abel: We Are Cain
Alfred W. Adler – Founder of Individual Psychology
from Part I - Fin-de-Siècle Vienna
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 December 2020
- Wounded Healers
- Advance Praise for Wounded Healers
- Wounded Healers
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Fin-de-Siècle Vienna
- 1 Sometimes a Cigar Is Just a Cigar
- 2 A Most Dangerous Method
- 3 We Are Abel: We Are Cain
- 4 Fear of Death and Trauma of Birth
- 5 From Character Analysis to Cloud Busting
- 6 Ernest Jones
- 7 Estranged Brilliance
- 8 When Freud Met Tiffany
- 9 Phoenix Forever
- Part II From Sea to Shining Sea
- References
- Index
Summary
This chapter starts with a description of Adler’s personal and family backgrounds, including growing up in the shadow of a high-achieving and popular older brother; life-threatening and disabling illnesses during his childhood; struggles to enter and complete his medical school education; dissatisfaction with academic medicine focusing on diseases instead of patients; his egalitarian medical practices; and his involvement in social and public health reform. It also includes narratives of Adler’s marriage with his Russian Jewish wife, who had strong socialist commitments, as well as their relationship with various communist revolutionaries. It then describes Adler’s association with Freud and their eventual separation, the evolution of Adler’s theories and practices, the differences in the temperament and orientations between Adler and Freud, and the continuing mutual influences between Adler and Freud even long after their break-up. It ends with a discussion of Adler’s role in and contribution to the field of psychotherapy and the mental health movement.
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- Wounded HealersTribulations and Triumphs of Pioneering Psychotherapists, pp. 44 - 54Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020