Elisabeth Young-Bruehl - Works

Works

  • Conor Cruise O'Brien: An Appraisal (co-author: Joanne L. Henderson. Proscenium Press, 1974, ISBN 0-912262-33-8)
  • Freedom and Karl Jasper's Philosophy (Yale University Press, 1981, ISBN 0-300-02629-3)
  • Hannah Arendt: For Love of the World (Yale University Press 1982, ISBN 0-300-02660-9; Second Edition Yale University Press, 2004, ISBN 0-300-10588-6)
  • Vigil (novel, Louisiana State University Press, 1983, ISBN 0-8071-1075-2)
  • Anna Freud: A Biography (Summit Books, New York, 1988, ISBN 0-671-61696-X)
  • Mind and the Body Politic (Routledge, Independence, Kentucky, 1989, ISBN 0-415-90118-9)
  • Foreword to Between Hell and Reason: Essays From the Resistance Newspaper "Combat", 1944-1947 (Wesleyan University Press, 1991, ISBN 0-8195-5189-9)
  • Creative Characters, (Routledge, 1991, ISBN 0-415-90369-6)
  • Freud on Women: A Reader (editor) (Norton, 1992, ISBN 0-393-30870-7)
  • Global Cultures: a Transnational Short Fiction Reader (editor, Wesleyan University Press, 1994, ISBN 0-8195-6282-3)
  • The Anatomy of Prejudices (Harvard University Press, 1996, ISBN 0-674-03190-3),
  • Foreword to 1997 re-issue of David Stafford-Clark's 1965 book, What Freud Really Said: An Introduction to His Life and Thought (Schocken Books, 1997, ISBN 0-8052-1080-6)
  • Subject to Biography: Psychoanalysis, Feminism, and Writing Women's Lives (Harvard Univ Press, 1999, ISBN 0-674-85371-7),
  • Cherishment: a Psychology of the Heart (co-author: Faith Bethelard. Free Press, 2000, ISBN 0-684-85966-1)
  • Where Do We Fall When We Fall in Love? (essays, Other Press (NY), 2003, ISBN 1-59051-068-2)
  • Childism: Confronting Prejudice Against Children (Yale University Press, 2012, ISBN 978-0-300-17311-6)

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Famous quotes containing the word works:

    Nature is so perfect that the Trinity couldn’t have fashioned her any more perfect. She is an organ on which our Lord plays and the devil works the bellows.
    Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe (1749–1832)

    ...A shadow now occasionally crossed my simple, sanguine, and life enjoying mind, a notion that I was never really going to accomplish those powerful literary works which would blow a noble trumpet to social generosity and noblesse oblige before the world. What? should I find myself always planning and never achieving ... a richly complicated and yet firmly unified novel?
    Sarah N. Cleghorn (1876–1959)

    We all agree now—by “we” I mean intelligent people under sixty—that a work of art is like a rose. A rose is not beautiful because it is like something else. Neither is a work of art. Roses and works of art are beautiful in themselves. Unluckily, the matter does not end there: a rose is the visible result of an infinitude of complicated goings on in the bosom of the earth and in the air above, and similarly a work of art is the product of strange activities in the human mind.
    Clive Bell (1881–1962)