Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Edoardo Weiss

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Edoardo Weiss


Role
  
Psychoanalyst

Edoardo Weiss httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsdd

Died
  
December 14, 1970, Chicago, Illinois, United States

Books
  
The structure and dynamics of the human mind, Sigmund Freud come consulente

Edoardo Weiss (1891-1970) was the earliest Italian psychoanalyst, and the founder of psychoanalysis in Italy.

Contents

His most important theoretical contributions were perhaps to the development of ego state theory.

Life

Weiss's interest in psychoanalysis led to him visiting the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society in 1908; he would subsequently be analysed by a leading member of that group, Paul Federn, with whom he established a lifelong collaboration. Working as an analyst in Trieste, Weiss analysed such literary figures as Umberto Saba; in the thirties he even consulted Freud about the propriety of himself providing a training analysis for his own son, and he regularly referred difficult cases to Freud for consultation.

After the Anschluss of 1938, Weiss emigrated to America, to work first at the Menninger Clinic, and then with Franz Alexander in Chicago. He oversaw the publication of Federn's posthumous writings in 1953.

Contributions

Weiss's first article, on the psychodynamics of asthma attacks, was published in 1922, and was followed over the next two decades by seven more, on subjects ranging from acting out to the fear of blushing. In 1950 he published his general survey, Principles of Psychoanalysis, in 1964 Agoraphobia in the light of ego psychology, and in 1970 the semi-autobiographic Sigmund Freud as a Consultant.

Weiss introduced the concept of destrudo into psychoanalysis, as well as that of psychic presence: the mental awareness of the internalised image of another ego, often parental, in oneself. From this and other studies in ego states stemmed his major influence on such later figures as Eric Berne and John G. Watkins.

References

Edoardo Weiss Wikipedia