
Rat Man - Wikipedia
" Rat Man " was the nickname given by Sigmund Freud to a patient whose "case history" was published as Bemerkungen über einen Fall von Zwangsneurose ["Notes Upon a Case of …
Rat Man: A Case of 'Obsessional Neurosis' - Psychologist World
The case of a patient’s obsessive thoughts inspired Sigmund Freud to share his observations in the 1909 case study Notes upon a Case of Obsessional Neurosis. 1 Referring to the man …
Case Studies: The 'Ratman' - Sigmund Freud - Psych Reviews
2019年10月19日 · A great tool to help readers of Freud’s “Ratman” study is the well researched Freud and the Rat Man by Patrick J. Mahony. Patrick was able to compare the original …
Journal of Mental Health and Human Behaviour - LWW
We consider the case of the “Rat Man” an important landmark work of Sigmund Freud that helped in understanding of clinical presentation and psychoanalytic aspect of obsessive-compulsive …
A youngish man of university education introduced himself to me with the statement that he had suffered from obsessions ever since his childhood, but with particular intensity for the last four …
Freud's Rat Man and the Meaning of the Rat Torture
Freud's 1909 case of obsessional neurosis of a patient called the Rat Man is unique in being the only case for which he saved his process notes.
Of all the cases that Freud provided histories for, the most extensive and valuable for evaluating Freud’s therapeutic technique and histori-cal reconstructions is his 1909 case of obsessional...
'Notes Upon a Case of Obsessional Neurosis' (Rat Man)
Dr. Ernst Lanzer, alias the "Rat Man," consulted Freud on October 1, 1907, and began an analysis that allegedly lasted a little more than eleven months and ended in a complete cure. …
The Rat Man, Ibsen’s Rat Wife and Little Eyolf. The Rat Man case ...
2024年11月22日 · According to Freud no light was thrown upon the meaning of his rat deliria until he mentioned that the Rat Wife in Ibsen's play Little Eyolf (1894) had made a strong …
Freud’s Rat Man and the meaning of the rat torture. - APA PsycNet
Freud’s 1909 case of obsessional neurosis of a patient called the Rat Man is unique in being the only case for which he saved his process notes.