News and updates from the museum office.| Freud Museum London
As Ernest Jones (1957) says in his masterly biography of Freud, ‘Freud was all his life engrossed with the great problem of how man came to be man.’ In his lifelong search for an answer to this question, Freud had learned that the human mind and human civilization originated from man’s past experiences and past developments. He discovered that individuals and their culture are the product of their past, while at the same time they always keep being pulled back to it over and over again.| Freud Museum London
We considered the theme of the body image through a psychoanalytic lens, focusing on the fate of the female body in contemporary visual culture.| Freud Museum London
This blog explores different approaches to child psychoanalysis after Freud.| Freud Museum London
On Thursday 20th June 2024 we celebrated the publication of the Revised Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud – a ground-breaking update on the Standard Edition first published 60 years ago, which followed the Hogarth Press first publishing Freud’s work in 1924. | Freud Museum London
What was Freud's great discovery, and does it remain relevant to this day? How can we think about Psychoanalysis in the face of so many changes and innovations in the 21st century?| Freud Museum London
Freud's daily routine was meticulously structured. Understand how Freud organized his time and balanced his professional and personal life.| Freud Museum London
Hilda and Freud's relationship deepend over time, with Freud eventually considering her both a patient and a student| Freud Museum London
From the Director. Warm greetings from 20 Maresfield Gardens, the beautiful final home of Sigmund and Anna Freud. Read now!| Freud Museum London
Otto Rank was an Austrian psychoanalyst who played a significant role in the development of psychoanalysis and collaborated with Freud.| Freud Museum London
Help save Sigmund Freud's Library. Donate or Adopt a Book and help save the library that shaped the creation of the ‘talking cure’.| Freud Museum London