INDEX

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A, B, C, D, E, F, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, R, S, T, U, V, W, Z

Abel, C., 195
Abel, R., 148
Abraham, K., 284, 358
Abstinence, 299
Accidental and symptomatic acts, 42
Accumulated and combined errors, 37
Adler, A., 203, 330, 351
Agoraphobia, 227, 233
Alexander, dream of, 65
Altruism, 360
Ambivalence, 369
Amnesia, 244;
childhood, 168;
hysterical, 245;
infantile, 245;
of the neurotic, 244
Analyses of dreams, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 153
Analysis, experimental, dream for, 93
Analytical therapy, 372, 388
Andreas, Lou, 272
Anxiety, 340, 342;
dream, 183;
equivalents, 347;
form of neurotic fear, 346;
hysteria, 233, 259, 316, 346;
hysteria, resistance in, 250;
neurosis, 338, 344, 347
Anxious expectation, 344
Archaic remnants and infantilism in the dream, 167
Art, and the neurosis, 326
Association experiment, 86;
free, 84
Auto-eroticism, 359
Back, George, 108
Basedowi, M., 336
Beheading symbol, 231
Bernheim, 81, 240, 385, 388
Binet, 302
Binz, 66
Birth of the hero, myths, 182
Birth, the source of fear, 343;
symbols of, 132;
theories of children, 274
Bleuler, 86, 369
Bloch, Ivan, 265
BÖlsche, W., 307
Breuer, J., 221, 232, 241, 242, 253, 254, 388
Breughel, P., 263
Castration complex, 175
Censor, dream, 110
Charcot, 119
Child, sexual life of, 268, 281
Childhood amnesia, 168;
dreams of, 101;
egoism in, 171;
experiences, phantasy in, 319;
loss of memory for, 168;
prophylaxis, 317
Children, fear in, 350;
sexual curiosity of, 274
Children's dreams, 102;
theories of birth, 274
Choice of an object, 368
Clinical problem, 244
Common elements of dreams, 67, 69, 75
Complex, castration, 175;
family, 285;
Oedipus, 174, 285;
parent, 289
Compulsion neurosis, 222, 227, 259, 261, 267, 298, 326;
fear in, 349;
manifestations of, 222
Compulsion neurotics, resistance in, 250, 251;
symptoms, analysis of, 224
Compulsive activity, meaning of, 239;
acts, 223;
washing as, 233
Condensation, 142
Conflict, role of, in neurosis, 302, 305
Conscious, definition of, 90
Conversion-hysteria, 259, 339
Criticism of dream, 194;
of psychoanalysis, reasons for, 246
Darwin, Charles, 247, 345
Day dreams, 76, 105, 324
Death in dreams, 133;
wishes, 169
Definition of psychoanalysis, 1
Delusion, 216
Dementia praecox, 339, 358, 363
Development and regression, theories of, 294
Diderot, 292
Difficulties of psychoanalysis, 2, 5
Disease, secondary advantage of, 334
Disguise-memories, 168
Displacement, 114, 144
Dream, the, 63;
of Alexander, 65;
anxiety, 183;
approaches to study of, 82;
archaic remnants and infantilism in the, 167;
censor, 110;
character of, 69;
criticism of, 194;
day, 76, 105;
definition of, 67, 68;
difficulties and preliminary approach to, 63;
distortion in, 101, 110, 183;
doubtful points concerning, 194;
for experimental analysis, 93;
hypothesis and technique of interpretation of, 78;
infantile, 183;
interpretation, rules to be observed in, 91, 92;
manifest and latent content of, 90, 96;
of a prisoner, 109;
the reaction to sleep-disturbing stimuli, 70;
stimuli in, 71, 73;
symbolism in, 122
Dreams analysed, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 153;
of childhood, 101;
children's, 102;
children's, elements of, 101-5;
common elements of, 67, 69, 75;
death in, 133;
elaboration in, 74;
examples of, 111;
experimentally induced in, 71;
of neurotics, 395;
typical, 234;
visual forms in, 75;
wish fulfillment, 107;
dream-work, 141;
processes of, 142
Du prel, 108
Ego, development of, 304;
impulses, 303;
instincts, 356;
psychology, 365;
regressions, 310
Egoism, 360;
in childhood, 171
Elements of children's dreams, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105
Erogenous zones, 271
Erotomania, 366
Errors, accumulated and combined, 37;
forgetting names, 34;
forgetting projects, 34;
losing and mislaying objects, 36;
misreading, 51;
proved by further developments, 39;
psychology of, 10, 23;
repeated, 37;
slips of the pen, 49;
of the tongue, 16, 18;
expectant fear, 344
Fact, principle of, 309
Family-complex, 289
Fear, 340, 342;
in children, 350;
in compulsion neurosis, 349;
expectant, 344;
in hysteria, 348;
of the manifold, 344;
neurotic, 341;
anxiety, form of, 346;
clinical observations on, 347;
origin of, 350;
and real fear, connection between, 350;
real, 341;
and neurotic fear, connection between, 350
Fechner, G. T., 69
Federn, P., 127
Ferenczi, 304
Fetichism, 302
Fetichists, 264
Fixation of the instinct, 295;
traumatic, 236
Flaubert, G., 263
Fliess, W., 277
Fontaine, Th., 324
Fore-conscious, 256
Forgetting, defense against unpleasant recollections, 56;
impressions and experiences, 56;
names, 34, 55;
plans, 52;
projects, 34;
proper names, 87
Free association, 84;
name analysis by, 85
Free-floating fear, 344
Fright, 342
Hall, Stanley, 344, 355
Hildebrand, 71
Hoffman, 321
Homosexualists, 266
Homosexuality, 263
Hypnosis, 253, 386;
psycho-therapy by, 253
Hypnotic and psychoanalytic suggestion, difference between, 390
Hypnotism, 81, 388
Hypochondria, 338, 339, 362
Hysteria, 233, 245, 246, 261, 266, 297;
anxiety, 233, 316;
conversion, 339;
fear in, 348
Hysterical amnesias, 245;
backache, 339;
headache, 339;
identification, 369;
vomiting, 233
Illness as a defense, 332
Imago, 139
Incest, 176, of Libido, 297;
theories of development and, 294
Reik, Th., 290
Repression, 255
Reproduction, 269;
sexuality and, 277
Resistance, 92, 248;
in anxiety hysteria, 250;
in compulsion neurotics, 250, 251;
external, 398;
forms taken by, 250;
internal, 398;
intellectual, 251;
in narcistic neurosis, 365
Ritual, pathological, 228;
sleep, 227
Roux, 314
Sachs, Hanns, 139, 173
Sadistico-anal sexual organization, 283
Sadists, 264
Scherner, K. A., 124
Schirmer, 74
Schwind, 109
Secondary treatment, 151
Sex symbols, 126
Sex, the third, 263
Sexual curiosity of children, 274;
definition of concept, 262;
development, 284;
instincts, 356;
life of the child, 268, 281;
life of man, 262;
organizations, 277, 283;
perversions, 175, 278
Sexuality, perverse, 268;
and reproduction, 277
Siebault, 81
Silberer, V., 203
Situation-phobia, 345;
phobias in children, 352
Sleep, definition of, 67;
ritual, 227
Slips of the tongue, 16;
effects of, 18;
explanation of, 25, 46;
general observations on, 48;
of the pen, 49
Sperber, H., 138
Spontaneous neuroses, 237
Stekel, W., 203
Struwelpeter, 321
Sublimation, 8, 300
Substitute names, 87
Suggestibility, 386
Suggestion, FOOTNOTES:

[1] "Fehl-leistungen."

[2] In the German, the correct announcement is, "Connetable schickt sein Schwert zurÜck." The novice, as a result of the suggestion, announced instead that "Komfortabel schickt sein Pferd zurÜck."

[3] "Aufstossen" instead of "anstossen."

[4] "Begleit-digen" compounded of "begleiten" and "beleidigen."

[5] "Briefkasten" instead of "BrÜtkasten."

[6] "Geneigt" instead of "geeignet."

[7] "Versuchungen" instead of "Versuche."

[8] "Aufgepatzt" instead of "aufgeputzt."

[9] "Angenommen" is a verb, meaning "to accept."

[10] The young man here said "aufzustossen" instead of "anzustossen."

[11] Prof. Freud here gives the two examples, quite untranslatable, of "apopos" instead of "apropos," and "eischeiszwaibehen" instead of "eiweiszscheibehen."

[12] From C. G. Jung.

[13] From A. A. Brill.

[14] From B. Dattner.

[15] So also in the writings of A. Maeder (French), A. A. Brill (English) J. StÄrke (Dutch) and others.

[16] From R. Reitler.

[17] In the German Reichstag, November, 1908. "RÜckhaltlos" means "unreservedly." "RÜckgratlos" means "without backbone."

[18] "Zum Vorschein bringen," means to bring to light. "Schweinereien" means filthiness or obscurity. The telescoping of the two ideas, resulting in the word "Vorschwein," plainly reveals the speaker's opinion of the affair.

[19] The lady meant to say "Nach Hause," "to reach home." The word "Hose" means "drawers." The preservating content of her hesitancy is hereby revealed.

[20] The German reads, "bei meinen Versuchen an Mausen," which, through the slip of the pen, resulted in "bei meinen Versuchen an Menschen."

[21] "Angenommen" is a verb, meaning "to accept."

[22] Josef Breuer, in the years 1880-1882. Cf. also my lectures on psychoanalysis, delivered in the United States in 1909.

[23] The reader will recall the example: "things were re-filled."

[24] From the sublime to the ridiculous is but a narrow passage.

[25] Yes, the passage from Calais.

[26] "Vorzug." "Vom Bett hervorziehen."

[27] "SchrÄnkt sich ein."

[28] In Germany tickets may be bought before the day of the performance only upon additional payment, over and above the regular cost of the ticket. This is called "VorverkaufsgebÜhr."

[29] See frontispiece

[30] "steigen."

[31] "den Frauen nachsteigen," and "ein alter Steiger."

[32] "besitzen," to straddle.

[33] While revising these pages I chanced upon a newspaper article that I quote here as an unexpected supplement to the above lines.

THE PUNISHMENT OF GOD
A BROKEN ARM FOR BROKEN FAITH

Mrs. Anna M. the wife of a soldier in the reserve accused Mrs. Clementine C. of being untrue to her husband. The accusation reads that Mrs. C. had carried on an illicit relationship with Karl M. while her own husband was on the battlefield, from which he even sent her 70 Kronen a month. Mrs. C. had received quite a lot of money from the husband of the plaintiff, while she and her children had to live in hunger and in misery. Friends of her husband had told her that Mrs. C. had visited inns with M. and had caroused there until late at night. The accused had even asked the husband of the plaintiff before several infantrymen whether he would not soon get a divorce from his "old woman" and live with her. Mrs. C.'s housekeeper had also repeatedly seen the husband of the plaintiff in her (Mrs. C.'s) apartment, in complete negligÉe.

Yesterday Mrs. C. denied before a judge in Leopoldstadt that she even knew M; there could be no question of intimate relation between them.

The witness, Albertine M., however, testified that Mrs. C. had kissed the husband of the plaintiff and that she had surprised them at it.

When M. was called as a witness in an earlier proceeding he had denied any intimate relation to the accused. Yesterday the judge received a letter in which the witness retracts the statement he made in the first proceeding and admits that he had carried on a love affair with Mrs. C., until last June. He says that he only denied this relationship in the former proceeding for the sake of the accused because before the proceeding she had come to him and begged on her knees that he should save her and not confess. "To-day," wrote the witness, "I felt impelled to make a full confession to the court, since I have broken my left arm and this appears to me as the punishment of God for my transgression."

The judge maintained the penal offense had already become null and void, whereupon the plaintiff withdrew her accusation and the liberation of the accused followed.

[34] This highly technical concept is explained in The Interpretation of Dreams, Chap. VII, Sec. (b) pp. 422 et seq.

[35] The principal street of Vienna.

[36] I do not mention another obvious interpretation of this "3" in the case of this childless woman, because it is not material to this analysis.

[37] Compare S. Freud, Totem and Taboo, 1913.

[38] E. Toulouse, Emile Zola—EnquÊte medico-psychologique, Paris, 1896.

[39] There are fagots and fagots.






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