René Laforgue

René Laforgue

René Laforgue (5 November 1894  6 March 1962) was a French psychiatrist and psychoanalyst.

Biography

Laforgue was born in Thann (then under German control) and died in Paris. He studied medicine in Berlin, and in 1919 wrote a thesis on "The Affects in Schizophrenia Patients from a Psychoanalytical Point of View".[1] As his interest in psychoanalysis developed, he underwent a training analysis and began a correspondence with Sigmund Freud. In 1926, along with Marie Bonaparte and eight others, he founded the Paris Psychoanalytic Society,[2] where he became one of the most prominent members.

His (unsuccessful) attempt to collaborate with the Nazis over the Aryanisation of the society in Paris during the Occupation in World War Two cast something of a shadow over his later career, and in the year of his death, 1962, he was removed from the roster of training analysts by the International Psychoanalytical Association.[3]

Laforgue is the author of several books on psychoanalysis, albeit more popularising than original;[4] as well as of a variety of articles on subjects ranging from the eroticization of fear in gambling,[5] through the development of the sense of reality, to such defense mechanisms as psychological repression and isolation.[6] Intellectually however he remained as much indebted to the French tradition of Pierre Janet and Henri Claude as to Freud;[7] and the tensions implicit in his competing allegiances contributed to his debate with Freud over the French introduction of the term scotomization. Initially welcomed as a description of the blocking of unpleasant perceptions in hysteria by Freud, the latter swiftly turned against it, arguing that Laforgue himself maintained "that 'scotomization' is a term that arises from descriptions of dementia praecox, which does not arise from a carrying over of psychoanalytic concepts".[8]

Despite their theoretical disagreement, the two men remained on friendly terms, Laforgue visiting the Freuds on occasion in the twenties: he would in the fifities write a memoir of them, which offers a rare glimpse of Martha Freud as "a practical woman, marvellously skillful in creating an atmosphere of peace and joie de vivre".[9]

Bibliography

Bibliography about him

See also

References

  1. J. Damousie, Psychoanalysis and Politics (2012) p. 36
  2. E Roudinesco, Jacques Lacan (1999) p. 17
  3. E Roudinesco, Jacques Lacan (1999) p. 154-5 and p. 258
  4. Rene Laforgue (fr)
  5. J. Halliday ed., The Psychology of Gambling (1974) p. 26
  6. O. Fenichel, The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis (1946) p. 633-4
  7. E Roudinesco, Jacques Lacan (1999) p. 20-22
  8. S. Freud, On Sexuality (PFL 7) p. 352
  9. Quoted in P. Gay, Freud (1989) p. 61


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