"For me, in some ways therapy is a sort of praying.") to patients who do not suffer from severe mental Freudian terms such as "repression," "projection," illness.) I might even add criticisms of my own. "ego" and "superego" fill our everyday speech. And For instance, scholars have made much in recent Freudian ideas about the hidden meaning of dreams years of Freud's connections to his Jewishness, and and the power of the unconscious mind have become particularly his knowledge of the Bible. Yet Freud basic to our thinking. (Cartoons and film clips in the built his major theory of human development, the exhibition — some serious, some hilarious — show Oedipus complex, around Greek mythology. Based Freud's profound influence on popular culture.) on the story of Oedipus, who unwittingly killed his Perhaps most important for us now were Freud's father and married his mother, he held that children attempts to understand the forces that shape soci- become attached to their opposite-sex parents and eties and cultures. Disturbed as we've been by feel both rage and terror in relation to their parents images of massacres in Kosovo, mur- of the same sex. ders in Littleton, Colo., and last Maturity involves coming to terms Opposite page, left: week's carnage in Atlanta, we can Nv i h these feelings. But what of sibling Freud during the last appreciate his speculations on how feelings, so prominent in the Bible? year of his life, at primitive desires and unresolved con- What about fratricide — Cain's murder Maresfield Gardens, flicts drive individuals and groups. of Abel — at its very beginnings? Freud London,1939. He spoke of societies in the throes of skimmed over these issues, minimizing a violence as reverting to "primal hordes," crucial aspect of human conflict that the uncontrolled by the restraints of civilization. "The Bible had recognized long before his time. fateful question for the human species," he wrote, With all that, I still stand by the conclusions of seems to me to be whether and to what extent their view \lye MN' , book: Sigmund Freud changed the way cultural development will succeed in mastering the the world. Though his theories of gender and sexual- disturbance in their communal life caused by the iry have flaws, he made it possible for people to human instincts of aggression and self-destruction. It speak about problems of love and sex with an open- may be that in this respect precisely the present time ness never before permitted. deserves our special interest." Though he may have exaggerated the success of These words, from Civilization and Its some of his treatments, his pioneering studies of the appeared in 1930, as Hitler was rising Discontents, mind and emotions have made psychotherapy a viral to power. You don't have to be in love with tool for gaining mental health. (Admittedly not Sigmund Freud to recognize how applicable they always well used. Here is Monica Lewinsky respond- remain today. 7 ing to a reporter's question about whether she prays: Opposite page, left: Freud (front row, fourth from right) at Clark University, Worcester, Mass., September 1909, where he presented a series of lectures that introduced psychoanalysis to America.. Opposite page, right: Sigmund Freud in his study at Berggasse 19 with one of his beloved chows, shortly before emigrating to London, 1937. On the covey; page 83: Sigmund Freud: His influence on popular culture is made clear in The Jewish Museum exhib- it "Conflict and Culture." Fred Flintstone hypnotizes Wilma until she barks like a dog, Jimmy Stewart awakens suddenly from a dream of:Piing in "Vertigo," and Murphy Brown quotes Freud;- "Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar "I knew I wanted to display materials on interpre- tation, repression, dreams, transference and sexuality as well as the extraordinary appropriation of Freud by artists, filmmakers, TV people and cartoonists. My colleagues at the Library of Congress and I spent a lot of time talking about the interesting materials that were available. "The great challenge was that the things people • most wanted to see or be close to were manuscripts that they really couldn't read. The originals, even to Germans, were really illegible because of Freud's using his old-fashioned script, so we came up with a way of displaying them and pulling out key aspects of content. We have what we call 'exploding manuscripts or holograms.' There will be a manuscript page [locked in a case] and beneath it a facsimile of that page with a highlighted sentence or two. On top of that, we have a color-coded placard with a translation of the highlight- ed passage, definitions that people need and a com- ment from me to connect one passage to the next." The Library of Congress gained its extensive collec- don of Freud materials with the help of his daughter Anna, who lived in the United States. She decided to donate her holdings because she felt the items would be safe and well cared for in the United States. Her father moved from Vienna "to London in time to be saved from the Nazis, who ultimately killed his sisters. To go along with the exhibition, Roth edited the book Sigmund Freud: Conflict and Culture (Alfred A. Knopf) and included 18 essays about Freud and his theories. The writers present a mix of subject matter and attitudes. For example, Robert Coles examines "Psychoanalysis: The American Experience" while Muriel Dimen addresses "Strange Hearts: On the Paradoxical Liaison Between Psychoanalysis and Feminism." As Roth developed the exhibit, he contemplated differences between Freud's theories and today's ther- apy approaches. While Freud attributed behavior to the intersection of instincts and experience, current therapists look more toward genetics and medica- tions for treatment of emotional disturbances. Still, Roth believes Freud's influences can be seen in everyday interactions. "The exhibit is trying to underscore that Freud was PSYCHOANALYZE THIS on page 90 Freud's Jewish Identity "Sigmund Freud: Conflict and Culture" gives insight into the impact of religious and ethnic Judaism on the life of Sigmund Freud. He was born Sigusmund Schlomo Freud on May 5, 1856, in the small Eastern European town of Frieburg, now part of the Czech Republic, into a Jewish family with religious roots. Raised from age 4 in Vienna, he soon discard- ed any religious sentiments in favor of the system of beliefs he was to create — psychoanalysis. Yet, while he lived a secular life as an atheist, Freud continued to identify himself as a cultural Jew, according to exhibit curator Michael Roth. Among the displayed items related to his Jewishness — with explanations — are: • Holograph document from the Freud family Bible, recording Sigmund Freud's birth, with an inscription written by his father, Jacob Freud, to his adult son. The Hebrew inscription called the Bible a "keep- sake and token of love." Later in life, Freud insisted he had forgotten how to read Hebrew, and once described himself as a "completely Godless Jew." • "Future of an Illusion" holograph manuscript from 1927. Freud thought of religion as a primitive attempt to deal with the frightening realities of the world and the impossibility of satisfying fun- damental desires. Love for and fear of the father found symbolic expression, he thought, in the major religious traditions. • "The Moses of Michelangelo" holograph manu- script and pen and ink sketch from 1914. Freud returned repeatedly in his writings to the , biblical. stories of Joseph and Moses. Michelangelo's Moses, Freud explains, is both angry at the infideli- ty of his followers and eager to bestow on them the great gift he received on Mount Sinai. Michelangelo's rendering of this ambivalence seems to have pro- voked Freud's own feelings about his place in the psychoanalytic movement. • "A Word About Anti-Semitism" holograph manuscript from 1938. This short text is comprised almost entirely of a JEWISH IDENTITY on page 91 ev ,ikvs4.$06.4, tmaK...k '' Berggasse 19, Freud's home in Vienna, with a swastika above the door, 1938. 8/6 1999 Detroit Jewish News 89