'A serious venture': John Rodker (1894-1955) and the Imago Publishing Company (1939-60)

Details

Ressource 1Download: BIB_BC9590697C86.P001.pdf (1400.75 [Ko])
State: Public
Version: author
Serval ID
serval:BIB_BC9590697C86
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
'A serious venture': John Rodker (1894-1955) and the Imago Publishing Company (1939-60)
Journal
International Journal of Psychoanalysis
Author(s)
Amouroux R.
ISSN
1745-8315 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0020-7578
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2011
Volume
92
Number
6
Pages
1437-1454
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Biography ; Historical Article ; Journal Article Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
John Rodker (1894-1955) was the founder of the British publishing house--the Imago Publishing Company--which undertook the republication of the complete works of Sigmund Freud in German just before World War II. Rodker, himself a writer as well as a publisher, was initially tempted by a psychoanalytic career; numerous obstacles, however, lay in his path. War, along with the complicated management of the royalties from Freud's writings, compromised the progress of what seemed to him to be 'a serious venture'. Besides Rodker, we meet numerous actors of the psychoanalytic movement: Anna Freud, Marie Bonaparte, Ernest Jones, James Strachey, all of whom had worked for the dissemination of Freud's writings. This paper shows how the English language gradually became the 'official norm' for psychoanalysts. According to the editors of the Standard Edition, at that time 'nothing new [was] being written' in German or in French. The failure of the Gesammelte Werke project signalled the end of an era in which psychoanalysis was mainly written about in German.
Keywords
England, Freudian Theory, History, 20th Century, Humans, Psychoanalysis/history, Publishing/history
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
17/08/2013 10:33
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:30
Usage data