Abstract

This study reflects on a report written about the Statutes of the Hungarian section of Association of Independent Medical Analysts and signed by the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at the Royal Hungarian Pázmány Péter University of Science in Budapest 1929. The report claimed the association as a surplus and sharply criticized its intention to popularize psychoanalysis. We discuss the various forms of public performance of medical analysts including 1) public lectures, 2) press appearances (interviews, essays, advertisements), and 3) in Soul Research (Lélekkutatás) the only professional journal of Hungary (1929-1932). One of the aims of this study was to draw attention to the role that the rival psychoanalytic schools of medical analysts played in making psychoanalytic theories available and understandable to the wider public.

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