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Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Sigmund Freud published by this site and its partners.

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    May 18, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. Hedda Bolgar dies at 103; renowned psychoanalyst

    Hedda Bolgar, a psychologist old enough to have attended Sigmund Freud's lectures in Vienna but youthful enough to have treated patients until just a few weeks ago, has died. She was 103.
    Hedda Bolgar, a psychologist old enough to have attended Sigmund Freud's lectures in Vienna but youthful enough to have treated patients until just a few weeks ago, has died. She was 103. Her mind was sharp, her zest for work keen, and her social...

    Tags: Science and Technology, Colleges and Universities, University of Chicago, Zurich (Swiss Confederation), Health Treatments

  2. May 15, 2013 | Los Angeles Times
  3. Steve Lopez: She worked past age 100, inspired many more

    In 40 years of interviews as a journalist, I've never met anyone quite like <a href="http://articles.latimes.com/2008/sep/14/local/me-lopez14">Hedda Bolgar.</a>
    In 40 years of interviews as a journalist, I've never met anyone quite like Hedda Bolgar. The pioneering psychoanalyst, who attended lectures by Sigmund Freud as a young woman and fled Vienna for the United States when the Third Reich entered Austria,...

    Tags: Mother's Day, Health and Medical Professionals, Psychologists, Psychology, Robert J. Lopez

  4. May 16, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  5. Review: 'Augustine' shows medical progress in primitive era

    The doctor-patient relationship at the center of the striking debut feature "Augustine" is modern for its time, the late 19th century. Yet it feels primitive, and not merely because of what we know about the period's scientific limitations.
    The doctor-patient relationship at the center of the striking debut feature "Augustine" is modern for its time, the late 19th century. Yet it feels primitive, and not merely because of what we know about the period's scientific limitations. As told by...

    Tags: Entertainment, Movies, Augustine (movie)

  6. Mar 1, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  7. Review: 'In Partial Disgrace' by Charles Newman

    TriQuarterly still serves as his calling card. Seven years after his death and nearly four decades after he stepped down as editor, Charles Newman will always be best remembered as the dashing pipe-smoker who took Northwestern University's sleepy literary magazine and turned it into a supernova for the smart set.
    TriQuarterly still serves as his calling card. Seven years after his death and nearly four decades after he stepped down as editor, Charles Newman will always be best remembered as the dashing pipe-smoker who took Northwestern University's sleepy literary...

    Tags: John Ashbery, Chicago Tribune, Arts and Culture, Philosophy, FedEx Corporation

  8. Jan 27, 2013 |Story| Hartford Courant
  9. Puppet Sculptor Anne Cubberly Creates A Magical World

    Walk into the high-ceilinged, wondrously cluttered studio of the inventive Hartford kinetic sculptor Anne Cubberly and you step into the workshop of a creative visual artist's unbounded imagination.
    The Hartford Courant
    Walk into the high-ceilinged, wondrously cluttered studio of the inventive Hartford kinetic sculptor Anne Cubberly and you step into the workshop of a creative visual artist's unbounded imagination. Although small, even a bit claustrophobic, this is...

    Tags: Halloween, Waste Management and Pollution Control, Artists, Arts and Culture, Music

  10. Jan 18, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. Review: 'Freud's Last Session' doesn't lend itself to deep analysis

    Sigmund Freud considered religion a mass delusion, a sort of group neurosis ideally suited to obsessive types. C.S. Lewis was a literary intellectual who found ways of channeling his devout Christianity into even his nontheological writings, "The...

    Tags: Entertainment Events, Arts and Culture, Philosophy, Entertainment, Gene Kelly

  12. Jan 5, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. Sigmund Freud and C.S. Lewis meet. Discuss

    "If the whole universe had no meaning," C.S. Lewis once wrote, "we should never have found out that it had no meaning." Pithy observations like that — rooted in logical argument — have made the writer one Christian whom many agnostics and...

    Tags: NBC (tv network), Austria, Philosophy, Arts and Culture, Tony Awards

  14. Aug 17, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  15. In case of emergency

    So, I counted.
    So, I counted. I own 78 books that I have yet to read. In a typical year, I read between 60 and 70 books, so we're looking at a good 13-month backlog if I were to not buy a single book until I cleared it, which isn't going to happen because I buy new...

    Tags: Book, Christopher Hitchens, Chicago Tribune, Steve Jobs, Lyndon B. Johnson

  16. May 23, 2010 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  17. John Waters has many muses - from Johnny Mathis to Leslie Van Houten - but Baltimore may be his biggest

    You might think you know John Waters, but until you read his latest book, "Role Models" - well, to quote Jeremy Irons' Claus von Bulow, "You have no idea."
    You might think you know John Waters, but until you read his latest book, "Role Models" - well, to quote Jeremy Irons' Claus von Bulow, "You have no idea." Waters avidly links his "Baltimore heroes," like the lesbian stripper Lady Zorro ("My kind of...

    Tags: Depression, Car Safety Tips and Advice, Lyric Opera of Baltimore, Psychotherapy, Authors

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