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  1. Jan 29, 2012 · Posted January 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 ...

    • Influence on Psychoanalysis
    • What Happened to Anna O?
    • Sources

    Breuer discussed the case with his friend Freud. These discussions revealed the germ of an idea that Freud would pursue for the rest of his life. It’s important to note that Freud never actually treated Anna O. himself, but her case greatly influenced his work and the development of his theories. Freud believed that her symptoms were the result of ...

    Despite the initial belief that Bertha had been cured through the “talking cure,” records indicate that she became progressively worse and was eventually institutionalized. However, she eventually recovered from her illness and made significant contributions to social work in Germany. In 1954, Germany issued a postal stamp bearing her image in reco...

    Borch-Jacobsen, M., 1996.  Remembering Anna O.  A Century of Mystification.New York:  Routledge.
    Brentzel, M., 2002.  Sigmund Freud’s Anna O.  Das Leben der Bertha Pappenheim.Leipzig:  Reclam.
    Breuer, J. and Freud, S., 1895.  Studies on Hysteria.Standard Edition, Volume 2.  London: Vintage The Hogarth Press.
    Ellenberger, H.F., 1970.  The Discovery of the Unconscious: The History and Evolution of Dynamic Psychiatry.New York:  Basic Books.  A Member of the Perseus Books Group.
  2. May 24, 2024 · Breuer, who was an associate of neurologist and future psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud, treated Pappenheim from November 1880 to June 1882. In a treatment approach suggested by Pappenheim, he had her express her thoughts through made-up stories, a process they called the “talking cure” or “chimney sweeping.” Following the death of ...

  3. Sep 13, 2023 · Anna O., aka Bertha Pappenheim, was the pseudonym given to one of the patients of physician Josef Breuer. Her case was described in the book that Breuer wrote with Sigmund Freud, Studies on Hysteria . Bertha Pappenheim (February 27, 1859 - May 28, 1936) was her real name, and she had initially sought Breuer's help with a series of symptoms that ...

  4. Anna O (Breuer and Freud’s pseudonym for Bertha Pappenheim), was born on 27th February, 1859 in Vienna, Austria to Siegmund and Recha Pappenheim. Her family adhered to Orthodox Judaism and were relatively privileged. Anna had a younger brother, Wilhelm Pappenheim, and two older sisters. In 1867, when she was just 8 years old, her sister ...

  5. 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.

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  7. 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.”

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