reich
Håvard Nilsen
havard.nilsen at hi.uio.no
Wed, 10 May 2000 14:12:11 +0200
At 22:42 08.05.00 -0400, you wrote:
>In what ways then was Reich "on board" with the Frankfurt School in any
>sustained
>way? What would it mean for him to "officially" break with them?
>This all sounds to me like a socially constructed "origin myth" created
>after the
>fact, by scholars of the 1960s generation.
>But maybe I am wrong. Is there is historian in the house?
>
>Neil McLaughlin
>
>
Reich had, as far as I know, neither a formal connection to the
Frankfurters nor a knowledge of their works, apart from his acquaintance
with Erich Fromm. In general, Fromm and Reich were part of the same
generation of marxist psychoanalysts in Berlin, a group that also included
Otto Fenichel, Edith Jacobsson and others. Fromm did probably attend Reichs
seminar at the Berlin institute for psychoanalysis. Reich and Anna Freud
had their respective seminars at the same time, so you had to choose the
one or the other. Karen Horney chose Reich, and I would be very much
surprised if not Fromm did the same.
It is not hard to see that Reichs two books from 1934, Characteranalyse and
Massenpsychologie des fascismus inspired Fromm a lot.
I did not know, however, that Adorno was sympathetically inclined towards
Reich, and that came as a bit of a surprise. If anyone knows of an excact
reference on this point, or in general on Frankfurters comments on Reich,
it would be interesting to see.
Håvard Nilsen
____________________________________
Håvard Nilsen
Research Fellow
Dept.of History
University of Oslo
P.O.Box 1008 Blindern
N-0315 Norway
Phone: + 47 22 85 49 87
Fax: + 47 22 85 52 78