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Imserba Webstore - Biography - Sigmund Freud: Analysis of a Mind (A&E DVD Archives)

Biography - Sigmund Freud: Analysis of a Mind (A&E DVD Archives)
List Price: $24.95
Our Price: $22.49
Your Save: $ 2.46 ( 10% )
Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 4 weeks
Manufacturer: A&E Home Video
Starring: Sigmund Freud, Biography
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5

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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 9780767068192
Format: Closed-captioned
ISBN: 076706819X
Label: A&E Home Video
Manufacturer: A&E Home Video
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: A&E Home Video
Region Code: 0
Release Date: 2004-08-10
Running Time: 50
Studio: A&E Home Video

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Editorial Reviews:

Sigmund Freud didn't intend to get into the field of psychiatry. His dream was to be a research scientist, but because of Jewish quotas he wasn't permitted to enter into the field of study. So he became a doctor specializing in nervous diseases, because at the time that's where the money was and he desperately wanted the cash so he could marry his fiancée. A&E's Biography: Sigmund Freud is an illuminating look at the man who changed the way the world viewed sexuality and who gave us "the talking cure," better known today as psychoanalysis. Through photographs, interviews with psychoanalytic experts and Freud's grandchildren, and even with a brief recording that Freud himself made, we gain a glimpse into the life of this complex man, from his childhood in Vienna to his escape to London during World War II. His life was full of contradictions: he delved into self-analysis, but never looked at his addiction to cigars; he was an early advocate of cocaine, causing a close friend to become addicted; he demanded complete loyalty from his protégés, causing a serious rift in his relationship with Carl Jung. This installment of the Biography series is a worthy addition, providing an enjoyable and educational look at "the doctor of love." --Jenny Brown


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Good Material on Freud
Comment: The is a DVD of an A&E Biography program about Freud from about ten years ago. But the age of the program is not at all a negative. This program does a good job of exposing the viewers to many aspects of the life of Sigmund Freud, who is probably one of the most misunderstood and misinterpreted of the early founders of Psychology. This program not only talks about Freud's work and his background, but puts it in perspective of the times. Having been to the Sigmund Freud Museum in Vienna, this program is very accurate in its description of Freud, his life and his relationships. This is another video that I will show to Psychology majors taking my History of Psychology class. I highly recommend it if you are a student of psychology or just want to get a better understanding of Freud.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Excellent enhancement for teaching Freud...
Comment: As a high school history and psychology teacher, I have repeatedly used this video to enhance students' understanding on the life, ideas and legeacy of Sigmund Freud. I think that it would also fit the bill for an introductory college psychology class. The movie has some excellent footage of the Grand Old Man of Psychology himself; as well as, interviews with historians, psychologists, and even two of Freud's grandchildren. It takes into account the measure of the whole man: touching upon his faults, as well as, contributions.

Whether you like Freud or hate him, you cannot dismiss him or his impact on modern psychological thought.

My students also like it; 50 minutes-just long enough to hold their attention and fill a standard class period.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: The life and times of the father of psychoanalysis
Comment: This is a very interesting look at the life of Sigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis and, to some, the "doctor of love." It is, of course, a look at his life and not an analysis of his work and ideas - while it certainly mentions many of Freud's theories, ideas, and publications, it does not go into an in-depth analysis of them. I tend to think of Freud as this wildly successful, albeit controversial, psychologist lounging back in his office chair with a cigar, nodding toward a patient lying on a nearby couch, and generally basking in his great fame and accomplishments. This is not really the case, however, as this video makes clear.

I knew nothing about Freud's childhood. After his birth, he lived in a one-room abode with a father in his early 40s, a mother in her early 20s, and two step-brothers as old as his mother. In the next few years, six more children would be born, but when the family moved to Vienna, Sigmund enjoyed the comforts of his own room and a doting the less precocious children were denied. Born a Jew, the anti-Semitism around him spurred him on to ever greater efforts at learning, and before entering medical school he spoke six languages and had been recording his dreams for a number of years. He wanted to do research, but a quota on Jews in this field made this impossible; he decided to become a doctor, and he chose to work in the field of nervous disorders primarily because such doctors were in short supply and he was anxious to establish himself and marry his sweetheart (the courtship was an interesting one characterized as exceedingly Victorian). Early in his career, he experimented with and recommended the use of cocaine for mentally afflicted patients, but this work with a drug he did not yet recognize for its deadly addictive qualities didn't exactly win him the acclaim he yearned for. His much more fertile ideas on the nature of hysteria and similar disorders of the mind as stemming from physical causes were changed during a period of study in France. When he opened his own practice, he made use of hypnotism among more traditional methods; soon thereafter, he began using "the talking treatment" and observed that his patients almost always seemed to trace the origins of their problems back to some traumatic childhood experience involving sex - be it real or imagined. From this work would come his ideas on the Oedipus complex and, much later.(...) At the age of 40, Freud decided to analyze himself using free association techniques, the results of which would form a large part of his most famous book On the Interpretation of Dreams (which sold all of 300 copies in its first six years).

The video then traces Freud's attempts to establish psychoanalysis as a recognized science. Many of his colleagues derided him as a dirty-minded man obsessed with pornography, and his Jewish heritage also worked against him among the establishment. Not until the 1920s would he become a household name. By this time, he had put forth his ideas on the death drive among men, having seen his worst visions of man's unconscious unleashed by World War I. His pessimism about man's inner nature grew in his final years, culminating in Hitler's rise to power and his own dangerously-delayed escape from Vienna. Bouts with oral cancer cursed Freud with great pain in the final decade of his life, but he never gave up his addiction for cigars.

The most interesting information presented here centers upon Freud's own neuroses, with the cigar addiction being just one of many. He also suffered from a paranoia about travel, gave up sex after the birth of his sixth child despite the fact he argued that any restrictions upon a husband's sex life (including birth control) would make him neurotic, and tended to faint in the presence of talented male friends such as Carl Jung, with whom he bitterly parted ways after Jung's ideas began to diverge from Freud's own insistent theories. This was a complex man who broke down the barriers between man and his formerly repressed drives. While his ideas on psychoanalysis were already beginning to be rejected or changed before his death in 1939, he continues to tower over the field of psychology and wields immense influence over popular culture still today. A study in contrasts, the life of Sigmund Freud makes for a fascinating documentary.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5
Summary: Disappointing
Comment: I think this video probably needed to be 2 hours instead of 1. The coverage of Freud's major contributions/concepts is much too superficial--it also presumes previous knowledge. For example, "libido" is mentioned but the video fails to describe what Freud meant by that term. His conceptualization of personality (i.e., the id, ego, and superego) is never mentioned! Some interesting details about Freud's personal life, but the video fails to capture his theories and the controversies surrounding them.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: it gave a brief synopsis of freud
Comment: I thought that the video didn't go into detail of explaning his profound theories.


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