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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 September 2014
1 Kaplan, Alexandra and Yasinski, Lorraine, “Psychodynamic Perspectives” in Brodsky, A. and Hare-Mustin, R. T., eds., Women and Psychotherapy (New York: Guilford, 1980);Google ScholarVan Herik, Judith, Freud on Femininity and Faith (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1982).Google Scholar
2 For example, Horney, K., “The Flight from Womanhood,” International Journal of Psychoanalysis 1 (1926), 324–29;Google ScholarThompson, C., “Cultural Pressures on the Psychology of Women,” Psychiatry 5 (1942), 331–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3 Eichenbaum, Luise and Orbach, Susie, Understanding Women: A Feminist Psychoanalytic Approach (New York: Basic Books, 1983).Google Scholar
4 Miller, Jean Baker, “The Development of Women's Sense of Self” (Wellesley, MA: Stone Center Working Papers Series, 1984).Google Scholar
5 Miller, Jean Baker, Toward a New Psychology of Women (Boston: Beacon, 1976);Google ScholarGilligan, Carol, In a Different Voice (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1982).Google Scholar
6 Eichenbaum and Orbach, Understanding Women.
7 Kaplan, Alexandra, “The ‘self-in-relation’: Implications for Depression in Women” (Wellesley, MA: Stone Center Working Papers Series, 1984).Google Scholar
8 See Conn, Joann Wolski, “Women's Spirituality: Restriction and Reconstruction,” Cross Currents 30/3 (Fall 1980), 293–308.Google Scholar
9 For this question, I am indebted to Richard Lawrence, a doctoral student in my course in Classics of Western Christian Spirituality at the Catholic University of America, 1985.