Browsing Department of Psychiatry by Title
Now showing items 21-56 of 56
-
A New 1569 Poem by Arthur Golding,' Re-attributed to Edward de Vere (Shakespeare)
(Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship, 2013) -
Newly Discovered Works by “William Shake-Speare,” a.k.a. Edward de Vere
(Oxfreudian Press, 2014) -
An Oxfreudian’s Reflections on the Psychology of Orthodoxy: The Power of Narrative
(iUniverse, 2014)"Most people are completely unaware that the Shakespeare authorship question is the greatest cultural mystery in Western Civilization. Few realize that Will Shakspere of Stratford-on-Avon was an uneducated grain ... -
Psalm Echoes in Shakespeare's "1 Henry VI," "Richard II," and "Edward III"
(Oxford Journals, 2010)This note will supplement past work which documents that Sternhold and Hopkins’ Whole Book of Psalms (WBP) was a major literary source for Shakespeare’s plays, Sonnets, and The Rape of Lucrece. I will examine three history ... -
The Pseudonymous Author of Shakespeare's Works
(Princeton University, 2008) -
Psychiatry's Retreat from Patients: Some Possible Solutions
(Guilford Press, 2010)As it becomes a more biologically oriented specialty, psychiatry is at risk of forgetting relevant psychoanalytic insights, such as the meaning of the psychiatrist's countertransference to the patient. -
Psychoanalyse und die Verfasserschaftsfrage
(Neue Shake-speare Gesellschaft, 2010) -
A Psychoanalytic Study of Edward de Vere's [Shakespeare's] The Tempest
(2009)There is now abundant evidence that Freud was correct in believing Edward de Vere (1550-1604) wrote under the pseudonym "William Shakespeare." One common reaction is "What difference does it make?" I address that question ... -
Reality as an Inkblot: Looking at the Trauma Literature.
(Guilford Press, 2004) -
Shakespeare's Bible: A Personal Odyssey
(American Academy of Psychoanalysis and Dynamic Psychiatry, 2010) -
Shakespeare's Sonnet 80, Marlowe, and Hero and Leander
(Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship, 2011) -
A Snail Poem, Newly Attributed to Edward de Vere [William Shakespeare].
(Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship, 2008) -
Sonnet 6 and the First Marked Passage in De Vere's Bible
(Shakespeare Fellowship, 2010) -
A Source for 'Rememberance of Things Past' in Sonnet 30
(Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship, 2013) -
The Sternhold and Hopkins "Whole Book of the Psalms" is a Major Source for the Works of Shakespeare
(Oxford Journals, 2009) -
The Sternhold and Hopkins Whole Book of Psalms Is a Major Source for the Works of Shakespeare
(Oxford Journals, 2009) -
The Sternhold and Hopkins Whole Book of Psalms Offers Crucial Evidence of de Vere's Authorship of the Works of Shakespeare.
(Shakespeare Fellowship, 2011) -
Sullivan and His Polarizing Legacy
(Guilford Press, 2012) -
The Theme of Betrayal in the Works of ’William Shakespeare’
(Karnac Books, 2013)"Betrayal underlies all psychic trauma, whether sexual abuse or profound neglect, violence or treachery, extramarital affair or embezzlement. When we betray others, we violate their confidence in us. When others ... -
Unconcious Communication and Literature
(Guilford Press, 2003) -
Unconcious Communication in Shakespeare: "Et Tu, Brute?" Echoes "Eloi, Eloi Lama Sabachthani?"
(Guilford Press, 2007) -
Unconscious Communication in Literature.
(Guilford Press, 2003) -
Unconscious Communication in Shakespeare: ‘Et tu, Brute?’ Echoes ‘Eloi, Eloi, Lama Sabbachthani?’.
(Guilford Press, 2007) -
A Wanderlust Poem, Newly Attributed to Edward de Vere [William Shakespeare].
(Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship, 2007) -
What's in a manicule? The de Vere Psalms as a New Shakespearean Source
(Shakespeare Fellowship, 2010)