Helene Deutsch
Historical Antecedents Freud, Wagner-Jauregg Lieberman World War I adapted from (Roazen, 1992)
Personal Struggles that Influenced Professional Life Female 1 Familial Relationships 2,3 Education and Profession 3 Personal Life 3 1 See Webster (1985) 2 See Sayers (1991) 3 See Roazen (1992) ??
Clinical Data & Research Case Histories Empirical Data Sources from Literature and History Freudian Concepts
Strengths & Weaknesses Realistic view of women Theories based on personal experience
Influence Women Therapists Women’s Psychology Freud’s Contemporary “As If” Personality
References Deutsch, H. (1944). The psychology of women: A psychoanalytic interpretation. New York: Grune & Stratton. Eisenberg, Z. (2010). Clear and pregnant danger. Journal of Women’s History, 22(3), doi: /jowh Krause, M. (1971). The femininity complex and women therapists. Journal of Marriage and Family, 33(3), doi: / Roazen, P. (1992). Helene Deutsch: A psychoanalyst's life (2 nd ed.). New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers. Roazen, P. (2004). An author’s reexamination: Helene Deutsch: A psychoanalyst’s life. Psychoanalytic Psychology, 21(4), doi: / Roazen, P. (2009). Helene Deutsch. In Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. Jewish Women Archive. Retrieved April 4, 2011, from Tolpin, M. (2004). In search of theory: Freud, Dora, and women analysts. The Annual of Psychoanalysis, 32, Retrieved from EBSCOhost. Webster, B. S. (1985). Helene Deutsch: A new look. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 10(3), doi: /494160