Abstract

Psychoanalysis as a theory of human mental functioning and a derived therapeutic for disturbed functioning would have its natural home in the university, and Freud gave evidence of harboring such an ambition. But the sociopolitical structure of the early 20th century Austro‐Hungarian Empire precluded this, and analysis developed, by default, its part‐time, private practice‐based educational structure. Psychoanalytic penetration of academic psychiatry in the United States after World War II made possible a counter‐educational structure, the department of psychiatry‐affiliated psychoanalytic institute within the country’s medical schools. This paper outlines, beyond these, other more ambitious vistas (David Shakow, Anna Freud, The Menninger Foundation, Emory University [US], APdeBA [Argentina]), conceptions even closer to the ideal (idealized) goal of full‐time placement within the university with strong links to medicine, to the behavioral sciences, and to the humanities.

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