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120 years of psychoanalysis: On Freud’s footsteps in Vienna

It was in Vienna that Freud saw the famous dream that prompted his seminal work 'Interpretation of Dreams' and altered the understanding of the human mind, its unconscious abyss and its sexual proclivities.

May 09, 2020 / 08:10 IST
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Anna and Sigmund Freud in The Hague, 1920. (Sigmund Freud Copyrights).

“Loneliness and darkness have just robbed me of my valuables”. No one knows the date Sigmund Freud (1856-1939), the famed archaeologist of the psyche, scribbled this line in his notebook. It was in his elegant home (19 Berggasse, 9th District, Vienna), that Freud formulated his most important psychoanalysis theories and invited Viennese high society to recline on his famous couch. It was in these rooms that he wrote the majority of his papers, held his Wednesday meetings and smoked his famously infamous cigars. 19 Berggasse was Freud's place of work for 47 years. When the workaholic Freud did take a break now and then, he liked to go for a walk in today's Sigmund Freud Park in front of the Votive Church, or on summer's evenings visited the nearby Café Landtmann, and in winter Café Central on Herrengasse.

Sigmund Freud, 1906. Photo Max Halberstadt. (Sigmund Freud Copyrights).

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It was in Vienna that Freud saw the famous dream that prompted his seminal work Interpretation of Dreams and altered the understanding of the human mind, its unconscious abyss and its sexual proclivities. That famous dream on the night of July 23/24, 1895, in Hotel Schloss Bellevue led him to the ‘interpretation of dreams’ – it was the birth of psychoanalysis. Published in 1899, Interpretation of Dreams did not find too many takers - it sold only 351 copies in 6 years and the second edition was published only 10 years later. The year 2020 marks the 120th anniversary of the publication of Freud’s famous basic work.

Freud characterised a new, revolutionary image of the human being and the success of his treatments and scientific papers spread his reputation far beyond the borders of Austria. ‘Freud mania’ took hold while he was still alive – and continued. While Freud's international reputation kept on growing, the Nazis burned his books. At 82, he was forced to leave Vienna in 1938 and fled into exile in London. Suffering from terminal cancer, Freud ended his own life barely one year later with an overdose of morphine administered with the assistance of his family physician.