Browsing Department of Psychiatry by Creation Date
Now showing items 1-20 of 56
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A Footnote in Freud’s Work and the Isakower Phenomenon.
(Wiley, 1986) -
Unconcious Communication and Literature
(Guilford Press, 2003) -
Unconscious Communication in Literature.
(Guilford Press, 2003) -
Reality as an Inkblot: Looking at the Trauma Literature.
(Guilford Press, 2004) -
A Wanderlust Poem, Newly Attributed to Edward de Vere [William Shakespeare].
(Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship, 2007) -
’And Gladly Wolde He Lerne and Gladly Teche’.
(Guilford Press, 2007) -
Unconcious Communication in Shakespeare: "Et Tu, Brute?" Echoes "Eloi, Eloi Lama Sabachthani?"
(Guilford Press, 2007) -
Unconscious Communication in Shakespeare: ‘Et tu, Brute?’ Echoes ‘Eloi, Eloi, Lama Sabbachthani?’.
(Guilford Press, 2007) -
A Snail Poem, Newly Attributed to Edward de Vere [William Shakespeare].
(Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship, 2008) -
The Pseudonymous Author of Shakespeare's Works
(Princeton University, 2008) -
The Sternhold and Hopkins "Whole Book of the Psalms" is a Major Source for the Works of Shakespeare
(Oxford Journals, 2009) -
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 ... -
Multiple Personality Disorder and One Analyst’s Paradigm Shift.
(Taylor & Francis, 2009) -
The Sternhold and Hopkins Whole Book of Psalms Is a Major Source for the Works of Shakespeare
(Oxford Journals, 2009) -
Shakespeare's Bible: A Personal Odyssey
(American Academy of Psychoanalysis and Dynamic Psychiatry, 2010) -
The Arte of Overturning Tradition: Did E.K.--a.k.a. E.O.--Write The Arte of English Poesie?
(Shakespeare Fellowship, 2010) -
What's in a manicule? The de Vere Psalms as a New Shakespearean Source
(Shakespeare Fellowship, 2010)