Heinrich Racker
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Heinrich Racker (1910, Poland – 28 January 1961, Buenos Aires) was a Polish-Argentine psychoanalyst of Austrian-Jewish origin.[1] Escaping Nazism, he fled to Buenos Aires in 1939. Already a doctor in musicology and philosophy, he became a psychoanalyst, first under the direction of Jeanne Lampl-de Groot, and later working with Ángel Garma and Marie Langer in Argentina. His most important work is a study of the psychoanalytic technique known as transference and countertransference, which was published for the first time in 1968.
His brother, Efraim Racker, was a famous biochemist.
Works[]
- "Observaciones sobre la contratransferencia como instrumento técnico," Revista de psicoanálisis de la Asociacíon psicoanalítica argentina, 1951
- 'A contribution to the problem of countertransference', International Journal of Psycho-Analysis 34:4 (1953), 313-324.
- "The meanings and uses of countertransference," Psychoanalytic Quarterly 26:3 (1957), 303-357.
- Psicoanálisis del espíritu; consideraciones psicoanalíticas sobre filosofía, religión, antropología, caracterología, música, literatura, cine, Buenos Aires: Nova. A.P.A., 1957
- Übertragung und Gegenübertragung : Studien zur psychoanalytischen Technik, 1959. Translated into English as Transference and countertransference, London: Hogarth Press, 1968. International psycho-analytical library, no. 73.
References[]
- ^ R. Horacio Etchegoyen, 'Heinrich Racker (1910-1961)', International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis. Reprinted online at answers.com.
Further reading[]
- Transference and Countertransference; Publisher: Karnac Books, 1988, ISBN 0-9507146-9-0
Categories:
- Austrian psychologists
- Austrian musicologists
- 20th-century Austrian philosophers
- 20th-century Argentine philosophers
- Freudians
- Polish emigrants to Argentina
- Austrian psychoanalysts
- Argentine Jews
- Austrian Jews
- Ashkenazi Jews
- Jewish emigrants from Austria after the Anschluss
- Austrian refugees
- 1910 births
- 1961 deaths
- Jewish psychoanalysts
- 20th-century musicologists
- 20th-century psychologists