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  1. Helene Deutsch (1884–1982) Helene Deutsch (Fig. 15.1) was an eminent psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, the first director of the Training Institute of the Vienna Psychoanalytical Society, and a lec-turer at the Boston Psychoanalytic Institute, where she influenced a generation of American psychoanalysts and social scientists.

  2. Although Helen Deutsch's The Psychology of Women contains a wealth of descriptive material about women's problems, the methodology employed by Deutsch in reaching her conclusions about femininity is marred in several ways. Her evolutionary-adaptational bias and natural science approach led to the attribution of questionable biological bases to ...

  3. Helene (Rosenbach) Deutsch, psychoanalyst, teacher, and writer, was born on October 9, 1884, in Przemysl, Galicia (Austria-Hungary), the youngest daughter of Regina and Wilhelm Rosenbach; her father was a prominent lawyer. At age sixteen, Helene Deutsch fell in love with Herman Lieberman, a lawyer and leader of the Polish Social Democratic ...

  4. Helene Deutsch was an Austrian-American psychoanalyst and psychiatrist best-known for her exploration of the particularities of the female psyche. Helene Deutsch (née Rosenbach) was born on October 9, 1884, in Przemysl, Poland , where her father, a lawyer, was at one time president of the Jewish community.

  5. Helene Deutsch was a pioneer in developing the theory concerning the « dark continent » of female sexuality, but she was long considered merely a follower of Freud, without regard to her original contributions. In fact, she diverges sharply, albeit diplomatically, from Freud on some key points, even from her first work on the subject, The ...

  6. Der offizielle Helene Fischer YouTube Channel#helenefischer | Mehr Infos: https://www.helene-fischer.deKanal abonnieren http://bitly.com/HeleneFischerOfficial

  7. Abstract. Evaluations of Helene Deutsch's work on female psychology almost invariably focus on her idealization of motherhood and on her attribution of narcissism, passivity, and masochism to the "feminine" woman. The author suggests that identification plays a more important role in Deutsch's portrayal of feminine development than has hitherto ...

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