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      • The case of Anna O (real name Bertha Pappenheim) marked a turning point in the career of a young Viennese neuropathologist named Sigmund Freud. It even went on to influence the future direction of psychoanalysis. Anna O. was a highly intelligent and intuitive woman who fell ill during her father’s final illness and after his death.
      www.simplypsychology.org › anna-o-bertha-pappenheim
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  2. Jan 29, 2012 · Bertha Pappenheim, always presented under the name of "Anna O." as the original patient of psychoanalysis, was actually never treated by Freud himself but by his friend and mentor Josef Breuer....

  3. Bertha Pappenheim (27 February 1859 – 28 May 1936) was an Austrian-Jewish feminist, a social pioneer, and the founder of the Jewish Women's Association (Jüdischer Frauenbund). Under the pseudonym Anna O., she was also one of Josef Breuer's best-documented patients because of Sigmund Freud's writing on Breuer's case.

  4. Jan 24, 2024 · The case of Anna O (real name Bertha Pappenheim) marked a turning point in the career of a young Viennese neuropathologist named Sigmund Freud. It even went on to influence the future direction of psychoanalysis.

  5. Sep 13, 2023 · Anna 0, aka Bertha Pappenheim, never actually met Freud, but her case played a significant role in the development of psychoanalysis and talk therapy. Learn more.

  6. Apr 17, 2024 · The classical Freudian explanation of Bertha Pappenheim’s symptoms is that she was acting out the pain in her mind—that’s the theory of hysterical conversion, or conversion disorder. “Hysterical symptoms,” wrote Freud in 1905, “are the expression of [the patients’] most secret and repressed wishes.”.

    • Gabriel Brownstein
  7. The illness of Bertha Pappenheim (Anna O) formed a case history which was to greatly influence the ideas of Breuer and his colleague, Sigmund Freud, in particular his psychodynamic approach.

  8. Apr 12, 2024 · In his case history of Anna O., written for “Studies on Hysteria” (1895), the book he co-wrote with Freud, Breuer notes that Anna O. called this process the talking cure.

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