Eugénie Sokolnicka
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Eugénie Sokolnicka (née Kutner; 14 June 1884, Warsaw – 19 May 1934, Paris) was a French psychoanalyst. An analysand of Freud's, she helped bring psychoanalysis to France in the 1920s, analysing several of the younger psychiatrists at St. Anne's Psychiatric Hospital in Paris.[1][2]
She ended her own life, by gas poisoning.[3]
Works
[edit]- L'analyse d'un cas de névrose obsessionnelle infantile, 1920
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Lionel Bailly, Lacan: A Beginner's Guide, 2009, p.6
- ^ Groth, Jarosław. "Eugenia Sokolnicka – A Contribution to the History of Psychoanalysis in Poland and France". Psychoanalysis and History, Adam Mickiewicz University.
- ^ "Sokolnicka-Kutner, Eugénie (1884-1934) | Encyclopedia.com".
References
[edit]- Michelle Moreau-Ricaud: Engénie Sokolnicka et Marie Bonaparte in Topique n0 115, ed.: L'esprit du Temps, ISBN 978-2-84795-205-6
- André Gide, Les faux monnayeurs, Gallimard, 1925