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Freud, Jung and Boas: the psychoanalytic engagement with anthropology revisited

journal contribution
posted on 2015-02-25, 00:00 authored by Robert KennyRobert Kenny
Sigmund Freud's and C. G. Jung's turn to evolutionist anthropological material after 1909 is usually seen as a logical progression of their long-term interest in such material. It is also seen that they used this material ignorant of the significant challenges to the evolutionist paradigm underpinning such material, in particular the challenges led by Franz Boas. This paper argues otherwise: that both psychologists' turnings to such material was a new development, that neither had shown great interest in such material before 1909, and that their turnings to such material, far from being taken in ignorance of the challenges to evolutionist anthropology, were engagements with those challenges, because the evolutionist paradigm lay at the base of psychoanalysis. It argues that it is no coincidence that this engagement occurred after their return from America in 1909, where they had come into first-hand contact with the challenges of Franz Boas.

History

Location

London, Eng.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Royal Society Publishing

Journal

Notes and records of the Royal Society of London

Pagination

173-190

ISSN

1743-0178

Issue

69

Publisher

Royal Society Publishing

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