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Section
1: Sigmund Freud's View of Personality
Section
2: Drives, Structural and Topographical Models
Section
3: Freuds Stages of Psychosexual Development
Section
4: Freud's Ego Defense Mechanisms
Sigmund Freud's View of Personality
Sigmund
Freud's life may be a classic example of
psychoanalytic theory. Or, perhaps,
psychoanalytic theory is a classic metaphor for
Sigmund Freud's life. Growing up in Vienna,
he was trained as a physician, completed medical
school and hoped to make a name for himself in the
medical profession. His attempts to do this
were not forthcoming and after receiving a grant to
study hypnosis in Paris, Freud changed his focus
from the medical model of diagnosis and treatment to
that of a psychological nature.
He
is important as the first major theorist to write
exclusively about non-biological approaches to both
understanding and treating certain illnesses.
These illnesses, specifically what was then called
hysteria, were considered medical in his time, but
were reshaped through his theories.
Although
Freud's father had several children from a previous
marriage, he was the first child of his
mother. As such, it is reported that he was
her favorite. He was given special attention
and was the only of her children to have his own
room and a reading lamp for studying at night.
Their relationship was very close although his
relationship with his father was described as cold
and perhaps even hostile.
After
completing his hypnosis grant, he published his
first book The Interpretation of Dreams, and
although it originally sold only 600 copies, it has
become one of the most respected and most
controversial books on personality theory. In
this book, he described his views of the human
psyche, introducing the concept of the unconscious
to the medical world. In a world of biological
theorists, this concept was not accepted by many of
his colleagues.
Over
the next 30 plus years, he continued to develop the
theories discussed later in this chapter. He
and his wife, Martha, had six children and it
appears he treated his youngest daughter, Anna, much
the same way his mother treated him. Anna
later followed in her father's psychoanalytic
footsteps and became a well known personality
theorist, taking over Freud's psychoanalytical
movement.
As
you progress through his theories, keep in mind the
time frame and location of Freud's life. Look
at the relationship he had with his mother and
father and you will see many aspects of his theories
at play. The question remains, did Freud base
the theories on his own life or has his insight into
his own life allowed him to uncover the unconscious
drives in all of us. Whatever your answer,
Freud's theories are alive and well in the realm of
personality development.
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