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Table of Contents Preface IX Acknowledgments XI Chapter 1: Introduction The Division of Freud's Psychoanalytic Corpus in Relation to his Jewish Identity 3 An Exposition of the Argument 5 The Early Period, to 1906 6 The Middle Period, 1907-22 18 The Late Period, 1923-39 20 Summary 21 Chapter 2: The Early Period Freud's Jewish and Humanist Educations 23 The Correspondence 41 Freud's Letters to Emil Fluss 42 Freud's Letters to Eduard Silberstein 48 Freud's Letters to Martha Bernays 59 The "Nathan" Letter 59 Further Letters to Martha Bernays 87 Freud's Letters to Wilhelm Fliess 108 Freud and Herzl 122 Freud, the Fighting Jew 124 The Obituary for Hammerschlag 126 Jewish Jokes and Jewish Identity 126 Summary 129 Chapter 3: The Middle Period Introduction 133 The Correspondence 135 Karl Abraham and Jewishness 136 Carl Jung and Mysticism 145 Jewish Tenacity 149 Letters to Oskar Pfister and Freud's Jewishness 150 Vll V111 DUAL ALLEGIANC" Freud and Talmudic Dream Interpretation Building the "Temple" of Psychoanalysis Totem and Taboo lung's "Aryan Religiosity" "The Moses of Michelangelo" Freud, the German Jew Freud's Jewishness and Christianity Sophie's Death Summary Chapter 4: The L21te Period The Encounter with Death The Correspondence The Return of the Suppressed: Letters from 1925 Statements and Letters from 1926 Letters in 1927 Georg Brandes VIVO Romain Rolland Freud and Zionism Freud and Hebrew Freud, the Fanatical Jew Correspondence with Arnold Zweig Freud and Hebrew University Origins of Moses andMonotheism The 1935 "Postscript" Freud the Galitzianer Freud and the Student Zionist Society, Kadimah Moses andMonotheism Revisited Summary Chapter 5: Dual Allegiance and Modern Jewish Identity Notes Selected Bibliography Addendum: Freud's Kiddush Cups General Index Index to Sigmund Freud's Letters 153 154 157 159 163 166 168 171 172 175 177 179 185 195 196 197 198 201 204 207 208 212 213 221 225 228 230 241 245 253 291 303 305 325 ...

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