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Freud, Sigmund

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Freud, Sigmund
Austro-Hungarian physician and founder of psychoanalysis
Born 06 May 1856 in Freiberg in Mähren, Austria-Hungary
Died 23 September 1939 in London, Great Britain
Sigmund Freud, the founding father of psychoanalysis, expressed a war-weariness and disappointment with the barbarity of the war that, after the final dissolution of the Habsburg Empire, gave way to nostalgia and resignation. In the aftermath of the conflict, Freud served as an expert in the Wagner-Jauregg process. His psychological profile of Woodrow Wilson, published posthumously, was the last echo of the Great War in Freud’s oeuvre.

Introduction

Sigmund Freud’s (1856-1939) early reaction to the outbreak of the hostilities was, typically for an Austrian intellectual, enthusiastic.1 Claiming, reportedly, that all his libido sided with Austria-Hungary, he saw his sons Jean-Martin Freud (1889-1967) and Ernst Freud (1892-1970) mobilized to serve in the Habsburg army. Yet, he soon began to express war-weariness and disappointment with the barbarity of all fighting powers, as documented in his Zeitgemäßes über Krieg und Tod (1915). As recalled by one of Freud’s patients, he observed the final dissolution of the Empire with nostalgia and resignation.2 In the long run, the war experience is often credited with broadening Freud’s understanding of human nature beyond sexual drive, while the immediate aftermath of the conflict saw the rapid spread of psychoanalysis. Perhaps surprisingly, as early as 1919, Freud’s psychoanalysis was acknowledged by Anglo-Saxon scholars as bringing “an atmosphere of hope and promise for the future treatment of the greatest of human ills.”3

War Neuroses

An epidemic of war neuroses that shook the Habsburg army in autumn 1914 raised expectations of psychiatrists while fueling personal and professional conflicts within this milieu. Though Freud’s own practice deteriorated, he and his disciples took active part in the controversial debate on the appropriate therapy. In the early war years, following the developments in the German Reich, a combination of suggestion, hypnosis and faradization (electrotherapy) enjoyed both state support and popularity within the medical milieu. Psychoanalysts serving as military doctors, notably Freud’s closest friend Sándor Ferenczi (1873-1933), a Hungarian, opposed this trend as dangerously blurring the lines between therapy and coercion. In autumn 1917, after some cases of patient death during faradization had been reported, Austria-Hungary’s Ministry of War banned electroshock therapy, admitting that it was largely ineffective. Logically, psychoanalysis, as an alternative treatment, was on the rise. This was shown, in September 1918, by the International Psychoanalysis Congress in Budapest. A few weeks later, Austria-Hungary ceased to exist.

Aftermath and Reminiscences

There were at least two codas to Freud’s war engagement beside his own intellectual development. First, in autumn 1920, the psychiatrist took part in the so-called Wagner-Jauregg process. Julius Wagner-Jauregg (1883-1940), the main proponent of the brutal treatment of war neurotics, was accused by one of his former patients of the deliberate torturing of patients deemed simulants. Freud’s role was that of an independent expert. While his written opinion was basically in support of Wagner-Jauregg, during the process he grasped the opportunity to criticize one of the enemies of psychoanalysis. Though the process had no practical consequences, hostility between the two grew even more. Their conflict contributed to the image of psychoanalysis as “humanistic” psychiatry.4

A surprising recurrence of wartime problems in Freud’s oeuvre appeared in print in 1967, when William C. Bullitt (1891-1967), an American diplomat, published Freud’s opinion on President Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) psychological profile, written in the early 1930s. Similar in tone to wartime propaganda, notably pseudo-psychological writings by Ernesto Lugaro (1870-1940),5 Freud depicted Wilson as a hypochondriac, neurotic monomaniac with a father complex. One of his main theses was that Wilson, recognizing the injustice done to Austria and Germany in Paris, fell into psychosis.

Maciej Górny, German Historical Institute Warsaw and Instytut Historii PAN im. Tadeusza Manteuffla

Section Editor: Tamara Scheer
  1. See Zweig, Stefan: Die Welt von Gestern. Erinnerungen eines Europäers, Frankfurt am Main 1992, p. 275.
  2. Ellenberger, Henri F.: The Discovery of the Unconscious. The History and Evolution of Dynamic Psychiatry, New York 1970, pp. 1112-1113.
  3. Rivers, William H. R.: Psychiatry and the War, in: Science 49/1268 (1919), pp. 367-369, here p. 369.
  4. On the Wagner-Jauregg trial see Hofer, Hans-Georg: Nervenschwäche und Krieg. Modernitätskritik und Krisenbewältigung in der österreichischen Psychiatrie (1880-1920), Vienna 2004, pp. 189-193.
  5. Lugaro, Ernesto/Robinson, William Newman: An Emperor’s Madness or National Aberration? London 1916.
Maciej Górny: Freud, Sigmund, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War, ed. by Ute Daniel, Peter Gatrell, Oliver Janz, Heather Jones, Jennifer Keene, Alan Kramer, and Bill Nasson, issued by Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin 2016-08-29. DOI: 10.15463/ie1418.10951
Note

Images1

Sigmund Freud reading his paper
Sigmund Freud photographed by Ferdinand Schmutzer, sitting at a desk reading a newspaper in 1926.
Schmutzer, Ferdinand: Bildnis Sigmund Freud (1856-1939), black-and-white photograph, 1926; source: Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Bildarchiv Austria, LSCH 0059-C, http://www.bildarchivaustria.at/Pages/ImageDetail.aspx?p_iBildID=4426038.
Courtesy of the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek.