Thalassa - Pszichoanalízis–Társadalom–Kultúra, 1996 (7. évfolyam, 3. szám)

BESZÁMOLÓK, HÍREK - English summaires

Edited by Antal Bókay, Ferenc Erős (editor-in-chief), Kinga Göncz, György Hidas, Judit Mészáros, Júlia Vajda THALASSA is the journal of the Sándor Ferenczi Society, Budapest. TFLALASSA is the title of Sándor Ferenczi’s classical work. THALASSA symbolically refers to the sea, the womb, the origin, the source. THALASSA is an interdisciplinary journal devoted to free investigations in psychoanalysis, culture and society. THALASSA has roots in the historical traditions of Hungarian psychoanalysis, but is not committed to any particular school or authority. THALASSA welcomes all original contributions, historical, theoretical or critical, dealing with the common problems of psychoanalysis and the humanities. The first issue of THALASSA (1990/1) is based on the proceedings of the first scientific conference of the Sándor Ferenczi Society, held in Budapest, 1989, under the title Psychoanalysis and Society. The second issue (1991/1) is devoted to the life and work of Sándor Ferenczi. The third issue of our review (1991/2) deals with the relationship between psychoanalysis and hermeneutics. The fourth issue (1992/1) is devoted to the problems of the relationship between psychoanalysis and politics. The fifth issue (1992/2) is a memorial volume devoted to the life and work of Géza Róheim. The sixth issue (1993/1) contains psychoanalytic studies on language, fiction and cognition. The seventh issue (1993/2) is devoted to the life work of the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan. The focus theme of the eighth and ninth issue (1994/1-2) are the effects and aftereffects of the Holocaust - from both psychoanalytic and psychosocial point of view. This issue commemorates the fiftieth anniversary of the Holocaust in Hungary. The tenth and eleventh issue (1995/1-2) contains articles on the relationship between psychoanalysis, postmodernism, art, and mass phenomena. The main topic of the twelfth issue (1996/1) is the relationship between psychoanalysis and feminism and related issues. The thirteenth issue (1996/2) is devoted to the life and work of Leopold Szondi, the founder of “fate analysis”, and published as well a series of newly discovered pre­­psychoanalytic writings of Sándor Ferenczi. In the next, 1997/1 issue we will publish, among others, Judith Butler’s essay on feminism and postmodernism, Jolán Orbán’s article on Lacan and Derrida, Slavoj Zizek’s essay on the obscenity of power. The 1997/2 issue will be devoted to the history of psychoanalysis in Eastern Europe. We will

Next