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perspectives at the expense of those of women and its recognition of the importance of early mother–child relationships. In his view, clinical evidence supports "Rank's observation that the ending of treatment brought forth dreams and strong emotions replete with birth symbolism." He maintained that other writers distorted Rank's ideas, for example by attempting to connect them to the obstetrician
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Rank aims to apply psychoanalysis to "the comprehension of the whole development of mankind, even of the actual fact of becoming human.". The chief purpose of the work, according to Rank, is elaboration of how the form of the womb expresses the protective forms of art, myth, religion, philosophy and
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Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, read the manuscript, and initially welcomed the book, writing to Rank to tell him that he would accept its dedication to him. Freud's attitude to the book later changed, and he alternated between praising it and criticizing it. Several members of a
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as one of "the most remarkable books in the history of psychology", and wrote that it presents insights "set in solid historical, philosophical, anthropological, artistic and literary foundations." He suggested that the work was "feminist" in its criticism of an ideology that emphasized men's
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was first published in 1924. The book was published in
English by Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner and Co., Ltd. in 1929. The book was republished, with a new introduction by E. James Lieberman, by
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to prevent birth traumas. He suggested that Rank was responsible for some of this confusion, by speaking of more and less severe birth traumas.
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Lieberman, E. James; Kramer, Robert (2012). "Willing, Feeling, Living 1926–1939". In
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expressed opposition to the work, since they believed that it implicitly contradicted some of Freud's basic ideas. The author
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committee secretly established in 1913 to protect Freud reacted to more harshly to
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published in 1932 and considered a masterpiece by scholars of art history.
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suggested that
Abraham and Jones were correct in this belief. Freud's
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The
Letters of Sigmund Freud & Otto Rank: Inside Psychoanalysis
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Lieberman, E. James (1993). "Introduction to the Dover
Edition".
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139:Das Trauma der Geburt
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256:Lieberman described
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458:The Trauma of Birth
456:Rank, Otto (1993).
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391:Gay, Peter (1995).
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321:Rank 1993
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