Freud Through the Looking-Glass
de Leslie Hossack
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À propos du livre
For almost 50 years, Sigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis, lived and worked at number 19 Berggasse in Vienna. Hossack writes: “On each of my visits to his office, I searched for items that Freud had actually touched, relics that contained his DNA... Freud’s clinical methods have been questioned, his academic theories discredited and his personal conduct criticized. However, his concepts continue to shape our thinking and colour our conversations today. We talk knowingly about the id, the ego and the superego; the Oedipus complex and the death wish; female and infantile sexuality; the conscious, subconscious and unconscious; and of course, the Freudian slip. We are all Freudians.”
In addition to more than 80 colour photographs, "Freud Through the Looking-Glass" contains: an insightful foreword by Dr. Stefan Pehringer, Austrian ambassador to Canada; an informative essay by Dr. Anja N. Caspary; a chronology of Freud’s life; a list of further readings; and writings by the artist.
The Freud Photographs are part of Hossack’s larger body of work that explores Hitler’s Berlin, Stalin’s Moscow, Churchill’s London, the D-Day landing beaches of Normandy, the Japanese Canadian experience during World War II, contested sites in Jerusalem, the NATO Headquarter Camp in Kosovo, and a Cold War bunker in Ottawa.
ISBN: 978-0-9868617-7-2
Caractéristiques et détails
- Catégorie principale: Livres d'art et de photographie
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Format choisi: Grand carré, 30×30 cm
# de pages: 120 - Date de publication: mai 18, 2018
- Langue English
- Mots-clés Freud, Hitler, Vienna, Hossack, photographs
À propos du créateur
Leslie Hossack’s photographs have been exhibited across Canada from Vancouver to Newfoundland and in the United States. Focusing on the conflicted environment of the mid-20th century, Hossack has completed major studies of historic locations in Vancouver, Paris, Berlin, Jerusalem, Moscow, Kosovo, London, Normandy, Vienna, The Channel Islands, Rome, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Copenhagen. Articles about Hossack have appeared in publications in Canada, the US and the UK. Her work is held in private collections at home and abroad, and in public collections including: the National Gallery of Canada Library; Library and Archives Canada; the Canadian War Museum; Global Affairs, Canada; the Diefenbunker: Canada’s Cold War Museum; the Nikkei National Museum; the City of Vancouver; the National Churchill Library and Center, Washington DC; the Center for Creative Photography, Tucson AZ; the Sigmund Freud Museum, Vienna and the Churchill Archives Centre, Churchill College, Cambridge UK.