189
  • English
  • עברית
Dr. Eran Rolnik
  • Homepage
  • About
  • Articles
    • Original Papers
    • Introduction Articles
    • Book Reviews
    • Opinion Essays
    • More Publications
  • Books
  • Lectures
    • Conference Papers
    • Filmed Lectures
  • Courses
    • Freud Seminar
    • Dreams: Theory And Practice
    • Freud with Klein
    • Psychoanalysis History Memory
    • Case Histories: Writing the “Talking Cure”
  • Media
    • Press Interviews
    • Radio Interviews
  • Contact
  • Homepage
  • About
  • Articles
    • Original Papers
    • Introduction Articles
    • Book Reviews
    • Opinion Essays
    • More Publications
  • Books
  • Lectures
    • Conference Papers
    • Filmed Lectures
  • Courses
    • Freud Seminar
    • Dreams: Theory And Practice
    • Freud with Klein
    • Psychoanalysis History Memory
    • Case Histories: Writing the “Talking Cure”
  • Media
    • Press Interviews
    • Radio Interviews
  • Contact
Dr. Eran Rolnik
  • Homepage
  • About
  • Articles
    • Original Papers
    • Introduction Articles
    • Book Reviews
    • Opinion Essays
    • More Publications
  • Books
  • Lectures
    • Conference Papers
    • Filmed Lectures
  • Courses
    • Freud Seminar
    • Dreams: Theory And Practice
    • Freud with Klein
    • Psychoanalysis History Memory
    • Case Histories: Writing the “Talking Cure”
  • Media
    • Press Interviews
    • Radio Interviews
  • Contact
  • Homepage
  • About
  • Articles
    • Original Papers
    • Introduction Articles
    • Book Reviews
    • Opinion Essays
    • More Publications
  • Books
  • Lectures
    • Conference Papers
    • Filmed Lectures
  • Courses
    • Freud Seminar
    • Dreams: Theory And Practice
    • Freud with Klein
    • Psychoanalysis History Memory
    • Case Histories: Writing the “Talking Cure”
  • Media
    • Press Interviews
    • Radio Interviews
  • Contact
Back to Basics
Homepage » Articles » Book Reviews » Back to Basics

Back to Basics

September 19, 2015

Freud’s path to acceptance in France was even less straightforward than in England and America, and “Vocabulaire de la psychanalyse” (The Language of Psychoanalysis ), published in 1967, was meant to help remedy this. The fact that its authors, Jean Laplanche and Jean-Bertrand Pontalis, were born in the period between the two World Wars was not without significance in terms of understanding the work at the time it was published.

read full article>>

Share
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Categories
    • Original Papers
    • Introduction Articles
    • Book Reviews
    • Opinion Essays
    • More Publications
  • Search
    © כל הזכויות שמורות לד"ר ערן רולניק 2015© All Right Reserved Dr. Eran Rolnik 2015
    עיצוב: מאיה דבשDesign: Maya Dvash | תחזוקת אתרים: Web3dPowered by Web3d
    Scroll to top
    loading Cancel
    Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
    Email check failed, please try again
    Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.