By Dr. Melamed
Title: Dr. Ernest Simmel, Papers, 1908 -- 1946
Predominant Dates:1935 -- 1946
ID: RG-08/RG-08
Primary Creator: Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Extent: 14.0 Boxes
Subjects: Application of Psychoanalysis to Criminology, scientific works of Dr. Simmel, Areas of scientific interests and works of Dr. Simmel, Biological terms, transmutation of external mobility of the organism in internal mobility of organs, Dr. Ernest Simmel, co-founder of the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute, 1920s, Dr. Ernest Simmel, German period, Rostock, Berlin, scientific work, discourse, Dr. Ernest Simmel, medical military service in the First World War, hospital for neuroses, Dr. Ernest Simmel, member of the Berlin Psychoanalytic Society, Dr. Ernest Simmel, poor health and illness since 1943, Dr. Ernest Simmel, Sanitarium Schloss Tegel, Berlin, 1920s, 1931, discourse, Dr. Ernest Simmel, scholar, President of Psychoanalytic Study Group, 1935 -- 1943, Dr. Ernest Simmel, studies, research, publication in Psychoanalysis, Germany, 1900 - 1934, Dr. Ernest Simmel, studies and professional work in Psychoanalysis, Berlin, 1908 - 1934, Dr.Freud, The Ways of Psychoanalytic Therapy, the Budapest Congress, 1918, Dr. Simmel, guidelines, Dr. Simmel, establishing methods in training, the supervised anaslysis and case seminars, Dr. Simmel, establishing the first curriculum for training in psychoanalysis, 1920s, Germany, Dr. Simmel, Freudian ideology of Psychoanalysis, Dr. Simmel, Freudian Psychoanalysis, principles, conceptions and content, Dr. Simmel, inspirer and the organizer of the Institute, Dr. Simmel, integrity of character, fearless, wit were his intrinsic qualities, Dr. Simmel, Men are being prompted by unconscious impulses or inhibitions, Psychoanalysis, theory, Dr. Simmel, perception and vision of the Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis, Dr. Simmel, program articles, lectures, papers and presentations, Psychoanalysis, Dr. Simmel, Psychoanalytic Treatment in Hospital, discourse of Schloss-Tegel, publication 1928, 1929, Dr. Simmel, publications, appeared in German and international scholarly journals, 1908 - 1934, Dr. Simmel, The Interrelationship of War Neuroses and Mental Trauma, 1918, won Freud Prize, 1918, Dr. Simmel, the organizer of the Los Angeles Psychoanalytic Society, Dr. Simmel, unattained dream of the full-scale Psychoanalytic Institute and Sanitarium in Los Angele, Dr. Simmel founded the Psychoanalytic Sanitarium at Schloss-Tegel, near Berlin in 1927, Director, Dr. Simmel induced the organization of the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Society, 1940s, Dr. Simmel invited Frances Deri and Otto Fenichel, psychoanalysts from Europe, Dr. Simmel transformed Psychoanalytic Study Group into a formal organization in the summer of 1935, Dysfunction of the organ represents an irrational actions of the same organ within the organism, Five stages of a personal narrative in terms of mental discourse, Dr. Simmel, Frances Deri, Paper in Memoriam of Ernest Simmel, read on December 13, 1947, memorial meeting, Freud's formula, neurosis represents a reaction upon the pressure of civilization, Freud's formula, the hysteric person changes a private part of himself instead of his milieu, Inhibition of thoughts and actions -- reaction of an individual upon his milieu, Dr. Simmel, Institutional psychoanalytic treatment, scientific works of Dr. Simmel, Life circles in psychoanalytic terms by Dr. Simmel, Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis, applied psychoanalysis, Dr. Simmel, Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis, Free Clinic, Dr. Simmel, Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis, Research Division, Dr. Simmel, Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis, training facilities, Dr. Simmel, Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis commence work in 1946, Dr. Simmel, Mental illness and physical illness may interchange and interplay which each other, Dr. Simmel, Prospective structure of the Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis, 1939, 1940, Dr. Simmel, Psycho-somatic medicine, scientific works of Dr. Simmel, Psychoanalysis, discourse and conceptions, Psychoanalysis defined correlations between organic diseases and mental diseases, Dr. Simmel, Psychogenesis for organic diseases, scientific works of Dr. Simmel, School for Nursery Years, endorsed by Dr. Simmel, 1940, Scientific biography of Dr. Ernest Simmel, 1900 - 1947, Sigmund Freud, Theory of Psychoanalysis, Some repressed ideas have grown unconscious may manifest themselves of physical functions, Substantiations and prospective for the Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis works of Dr. Simmel, The fifth life circle is love and matrimony, Dr. Simmel, The first life circle is the family, Dr. Simmel, The fourth life circle is social and societal, Dr. Simmel, The function of super-ego is a reflection of the childhood experience, Dr. Simmel, The key to mastering ones own life is to know the unconscious, Freud, by Dr. Simmel, The Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis, effort to organize and function, all by Dr. Simmel, Theory of Psychoanalysis, narratives, Therapy for Psychoses, scientific works of Dr. Simmel, The second life circle is school, Dr. Simmel, The sense of Freud's formula, neuroses represents a reaction upon the pressure of civilization, The third life circle is profession, business or trade, Dr. Simmel, The unconscious determines life conflict, Psychoanalysis, theory, Transmutation of the external mobility of the joint organism into the internal mobility of organs, War-Neuroses, scientific works of Dr. Simmel
The Record Group RG-08, Dr. Ernst Simmel, Papers, 1908 -- 1947, comprises collections and sub-collection related to his professional and public activities in German and in America.
By and large, we may relate the German period as the one that is represented by Dr. Simmel's professional narratives published in international psychoanalytic periodicals, his organizational work as a Director of Sanitarium Schloss Tegel in Berlin, his professional teaching and research work in the Psychoanalytic Institute in Berlin, as well as his international scientific participation in conferences and like.
Dr. Simmel's American period, 1935 --1938, connotes profound difference from that one of Germany. He becomes the organizer leader and protector of the rising psychoanalytic movement in the West Coast of America.
He has taken upon himself a burden of multi-functional tasks, not always plausible in terms of accomplishing. However, Dr. Simmel being the Captain the Pilot or in official language President of the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles in 1935 -- 1944, has laid the foundation of Psychoanalysis as the new Science in the Los Angeles. The later evolved psychoanalytic institutions inherited and ramified the fundamentals of Psychoanalytic Science organized and steered up by Dr. Ernst Simmel.
The German period represented in the Record Group largely by publications, then the American period overall comprises correspondences between Dr. Simmel and other scholars or officials as well as his narrative in the theme of Psychoanalysis in English language.
A separate theme of these collections is Dr. Simmel multi-vectorial activity as President of the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles. In this regard, the collections well represent numerous records of scientific, business, council and other periodic gathering of the members of the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles.
Dr. Simmel left a large corpus of personal and official correspondences, overall in English language with a number of correspondences in German language.
All in all, this Record Group of Dr. Ernst Simmel is of the immense historical value would it be scholarship, teaching, training or merely the History of Psychoanalysis as the Science.
This Record Group, RG-08, Dr. Ernst Simmel, Papers, 1908 -- 1947 comprises collections, sub-collections and documents, all in all reflected on multi-vectorial scientific, public and humanitarian activity of Dr. Ernst Simmel in German and America.
Overall these Papers could be categorized in to the following groups,
RG- 08.01, Bericht über den 6. Allgemeinen ärztlichen Kongress für Psychotherapie in Drsden, 14 -- 17 Mai 1931
Report on the 6th General Congress of Psycotherapy in Dresden, 14 -- 17 May 1931
Dr. Ernst Simmel presented the lecture,
Über die Psychogenese von Organstörungen und ihre psychoanalytische Behandlung
On the Psychogenesis of organ disorders and their psychoanalysis treatment
Publication in 11 pages, a brochure
An abstract on one page
A manuscript on the same topic in 19 pages
RG-08.02, A letter from Dr. Forest Anderson, Scientific Director of Child Guidance Clinic to Mrs. Margrit Libbin, Secretary of Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles
Subjects, Child Guidance Clinic, 1325 West Adams Boulevard, Los Angeles
Date, December 28, 1936
Document in one page
Content,
Mrs. Libbin
850 5th Avenue
Los Angeles
Dear Mrs. Libbin,
I enclose check for three dollars as library assessment for the Psychoanalytic Study Group. I regret that I seem unable to attend the meeting. Life gets so complicated that I simply cannot do a number of things I would like to do. My interests are with you and I shall be present whenever I can.
With good wished for the Season, I am Sincerely yours
Dr. Forrest Anderson, Director
RG-08.03, A letter from Dr. Meredith Smith, Director of The John Dewey School, located at 1330 N. Crescent Heights Boulevard, Hollywood, California to Ms. Margrit Libbin, the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles, Secretary
Date, October 29, 1935
Document in one page
Content, My Dear Ms. Libbin,
I want to thank you for your very kind invitation to be a guest at the meeting of your Psychoanalytic Study Group last Friday. I was sorry that a previous engagement made it impossible for me to attend that evening.
Sincerely
Signature
RG-08.04, A notification about membership in the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles
Date, October 12, 1938
Addressed to, Mr. D.P. Wilson, 1021 West 49th Street, Los Angeles
From, Margrit Libbin, Secretary
Document in one page
Content,
Dear Mrs. Wilson,
Since you did not pay your dues last year and have not been to any of the recent meetings we will assume, unless we hear from you to the contrary that you do not wish to continue your membership in the Study Group
<p align="right"> Very sincerely yours,
<p align="right"> Secretary
<p align="right">
<p align="right">
RG-08.05, A notification about membership in the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles
Date, October 12, 1938
Addressed to Dr. Helen Hopkins, 3875 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles
From, Margrit Libbin, Secretary
Document in one page
Content,
My Dear Dr. Hopkins,
Since you did not pay your dues last year and have not been present at recent meetings we will assume, unless we hear from you to the contrary, that you do not wish to continue your associate membership in the study group.
RG-08.06, A Memo from Dr. Ernst Simmel to Dr. Charles Tidd with to the Appeal of Aid to War Children
Date, January 21, 1941
Document in one page
Content,
Dear Dr. Tidd,
I made a few more inquiries about the problem we discussed at our last council meeting. The question whether we should respond to Mrs. Burlingham’s appeal for money. I enclose a letter from Foster Parents Plan for War Children, from which you will see that the money is really needed.
It is needed for a recuperation center for women and children (conducted by Anna Freud) who have lost their homes as a consequence of the bombardment.
Via Erikson I learned that Anna Freud and Mrs. Dorothy Burlingham intend to use this opportunity to study Shell-Shock in children. Of course they do not wish any publicity about this project s people might think that he humanitarian goal is only secondary.
My opinion is that the Study Group should respond to this appeal. I am enclosing a draft for the appeal. Please comment on the idea and get in touch with the other members of the council to get their opinion on the matter.
Thanks, Sincerely Yours, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Signature
RG-08.06, Dr. Simmel, Preparatory notes, article Pregenital Primacy and Intestinal Stage of the Libido Organization, 1933
The term pregenital designates the libidinal phases prior to the definitive, genital organization of psychosexuality
Handwritten notes for this article in the notebook
Creators,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst (1935)
Subjects,
Scholarly works of Dr. Ernst Simmel, publications
Dr. Simmel, scholarly productive German period, 1919-1934
Dr. Simmel, preparatory notes for scientific works
Dr. Simmel, Pregenital Primacy and Intestinal Stage of the Libido Organization, notes
Psychoanalysis, terminology and concepts
Pregenital designates the libidinal phases prior to the definitive, genital organization
Pregenital phase of the Libido
Related Papers by Dr. Karl Abraham
Libido, Melancholia, Obsessional Neuroses exhibit significant differences
Libidinal excitation and anal erotism
The anal erotism contains two opposite pleasurable tendencies
Psychoanalysis, discourse and conceptions
Theory of Libido, Terminology
Document in 12 pages
Germany, 1933
RG-08.07, Dr. Simmel, Abstract of his article Preparatory notes, article Pregenital Primacy and Intestinal Stage of the Libido Organization, 1933 in German
Document in three pages
Abstract of the article Praegenitalprimat und intestinale Stufe der Libidoorganisation (Pregenital Primacy and Intestinal Stage of the Libido Organization)
Germany, 1933
Creators,
Dr. Ernst Simmel
Subjects,
Scholarly works of Dr. Ernst Simmel, publications
Dr. Simmel, scholarly productive German period, 1919-1934
Dr. Simmel, Scientific works, abstracts
Libido as the energy, regarded in a quantitative count of the instincts, Freud
Libido instincts have to do with all that may be comprised under the word 'love,' Freud
Libido is the instinct energy of force contained in the Id (ES), the unconscious structure
Stages of Libido by Freud
Oral stage of Libido
Anal stage of Libido
Phallic stage of Libido
Latency stage of Libido
Genital stage of Libido
Pregenital designates the libidinal phases prior to the definitive, genital organization
Pregenital phase of the Libido
Dr. Simmel, Pregenital Primacy and Intestinal Stage of the Libido Organization, abstract
Libidinal excitation and anal erotism
The anal erotism contains two opposite pleasurable tendencies
Psychoanalysis, discourse and conceptions
Theory of Libido, terminology
RG-08.08, Dr. Simmel, Courses taught in Schloss Tegel Institute, Berlin, 1929, 1930, in German
Syllabus of courses taught by Dr. Ernst Simmel at Tegel Institute and Sanitarium in Berlin for the year 1929/1930, in German
Document in 28 pages
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
Addictions to morphine, cocaine, alcohol, sleep medication, gambling treated in Schloll Tegel
Architect Ernst Freud, son of Sigmund Freud redesigned the building in Bauhaus style
Carl Maria Herond, psychoanalytically trained assistant, Schloss Tegel psychoanalytic hospital, 1927
Dysfunctioning of sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system treated in Schloss Tegel Hospital
Dorothy Burlingham, financial support for the Schloss Tegel Psychoanalytic Hospital
Dr. Ernst Simmel and Dr. Abraham Eitington, co-directors of the Schloss Tegel Institute, 1927-1931
Dr. Ernst Simmel, narratives, Schloss Tegel
Dr. Jekels, investor in Sanitarium Schloss Tegel Inc., Psychiatric Hospital, 1927
Dr. Nussbrecher, investor in Sanitarium Schloss Tegel Inc., Psychiatric Hospital, 1927
Dr. Simmel, all primitive libido are mixed without differentiation and are identical to organ libido
Dr. Simmel, courses of treatment in Schloss Tegel Sanitarium, Psychoanalysis, discourse
Dr. Simmel, intestinal-libido, ego-libido, object-libido are mixed r scientific concept
Dr. Simmel, Principles of treatment of mentally disturbed patients in the Schloss Tegel hospital
Dr. Simmel, Schloss Tegel, prototype for present day mental hospital
Dr. Simmel, scientific concepts
Dr. Simmel, the pleasure of life we leave untouched to avoid unconscious expiation of guilt feelings
Dr. Simmel added the seminar for Practical Analysis to the curriculum of the Berlin Institute
Dr. Simmel founded the Psychoanalytic Sanitarium at Schloss-Tegel, near Berlin in 1927, Director
Dr. Simmel signed a lease agreement with Reinhold von Heinz on November 6, 1926, Schloss Tegel
Dysfunctioning of the gland of internal secretion, namely thyroid treated in Schloss Tegel hospital
Edith Weigerr-Vownichel, psychoanalytically trained assistant, Schloss Tegel psychoanalytic hospital
Eva Rosenfeld, psychoanalytically trained assistant, Schloss Tegel psychoanalytic hospital, 1927
Financial support to the Schloss Tegel Hospital, private funds
Frau Bruentizer, Chief of nursing staff, Schloss Tegel, psychoanalytic hospital, 1927
Frau Schalit, psychoanalytically trained assistant, Schloss Tegel, psychoanalytic hosptial, 1927
Geheim Regierungsra, Reinhold von Heinz, owner of the Castle, Schloll Tegel
Helmuth Kaiser, psychoanalytically trained assistant, Schloss Tegel psychoanalytic hospital, 1927
Irene Haenel-Guttmann, psychoanalytically trained assistant, Schloss Tegel psychoanalytic hospital
Ludwig Fries, psychoanalytically trained assistant, Schloss Tegel, psychoanalytic hospital, 1927
Marie Bonaparte, financial support to the Schloss Tegel Psychoanalytic Hospital
Martial problems, suicidal attempts, "flight into illness," treated in Schloss Tegel hospital
Mental and Organic disorders treated in Schloss Tegel Psychoanalytic Hospital, 1917-1931
Moshe Wulff, psychoanalytically trained assistant, Scholls Tegel, psychoanalytic hospital, 1927
Nazi Germany, SA Berlin Brandenburg took possession of the Schloss Tegel hospital for relief work
Neuroses of genito-urinary tract, treated in Schloss Tegel Psychoanalytic Hospital, 1927-1931
Neuroses of the respiratory and alimentary tracts treated in Schloss Tegel Psychoanalytic Hospital
Next to the daily analytic sessions there were occupational and hydro therapy Schloss Tegel hospital
Obsessive compulsive neuroses, phobias, hysteria - treated at Scholls Tegel psychoanalytic hospital
Organic disorders were treated at the Schloss Tegel Psychoanalytic Hospital, 1927 - 1931
Organization of the treatment in Schloss Tegel, designed by Dr. Simmel
Patient population in the Schloss Tegel Psychoanalytic Hospital, 1927 -- 1931
Personality development problems, more for children and adolescents treated in Schloss Tegel
Professor Julius Hirsch, investor in Sanitarium Schloss Tegel Inc., Psychiatric Hospital, 1927
Psychoanalytically trained nursing staff, Schloss Tegel, psychoanalytic hospital
Psychoanalytic Hospital Schloss Tegel, psychoanalytically trained staff, 1927
Raymond de Saussure, financial support to the Schloss Tegel Psychoanalytic Hospital
Rene Spitz, financial support to the Schloss Tegel Psychoanalytic Hospital
Rudolf Bilz, psychoanalytically trained assistant, Schloss Tegel Psychoanalytic Hospital
Sanitarium Schloss Tegel Inc., Psychiatric Hospital, 1927
Schloss Tegel, Psychoanalytic Hospital, discourse and teaching curriculum, 1927 -- 1931
Schloss Tegel, the Contract specified the use it as a sanitarium with living quarters, garden, park
The early body representation may become points of fixation for possible later regression, concept
There existed no group therapy, Schloss Tegel Psychoanalytic Hospital, 1917 - 1931
Psychoanalysis, discourse and conceptions
RG-08.09, Dr. Simmel, article in German, A Screen Memory in the State of Formation, published in 1925, Germany
Document in ten pages
Language, German
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
Scholarly works of Dr. Ernst Simmel, publications
Dr. Simmel, scholarly productive German period, 1919-1934
Dr. Simmel, A Screen Memory in Statu Nascendi (Formation state), in German, 1925
Dr. Simmel, Psychoanalytic Theory and Conceptions
Dr. Simmel, the story behind the article A Screen Memory In State of Nascendi, 1925
Son of Dr. Ernst Simmel, medical treatment induced fears, 1925
Dr. Simmel, a screen memory repressed negative experience, related to his 3.5 year of age son
How the screen memory is formed, experience of Simmel's son, 1925
Dr. Simmel, the unpleasant ideas threatened to break into consciousness, formation of screen memory
Dr. Simmel, analytical patients are torn between resistance and repetition-compulsion, 1925
Dr. Simmel, Screen Memories arise under the influence of transference and repetition-compulsion
Dr. Simmel, little boy, reaction to cruel undisguised tendency of a physician, 1925
Simmel, nowadays we curb our cruelty and only allow ourselves to injure our fellow-men mentally
Simmel, there are many adults who remain all their lives helpless children to mental attack
Simmel, Adults are also saddened or wounded if people jest with them, they understand jokes too well
Dr. Simmel, publications, appeared in German and international scholarly journals, 1908 - 1934
International Journal of Psychoanalysis, publications of Dr. Simmel
Psychoanalysis, discourse and conceptions
RG-08.10, Dr. Simmel, Incendiarism, Paper presented before the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Society, Spring 1944
Document in 22 pages
Language, English
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
Scholarly works of Dr. Ernst Simmel, publications
Dr. Simmel, presentations and lectures
Dr. Simmel, papers presented at conferences and symposiums
Dr. Simmel, Incendiarism, paper presented before the San Francisco psychoanalytic society, 1944
Psychoanalytic narratives, papers, publications
Dr. Simmel, Incendiarism, paper, content and conceptions, Spring 1944
Dr. Simmel, psychoanalysis applied to the trial case for incendiarism, California
Psychoanalytic discourse with regard to the defendant, Incendiarism, trial, Dr. Simmel, California
The life-story of the defendant and applied psychoanalysis, Dr. Simmel, California
Correlations between Incendiarism and repressed memories, Dr. Simmel, a trial, California
Psychoanalysis, discourse and conceptions
RG-08.11, Dr. Simmel, Psychoanalysis and Mental Health, Paper presented to Psychoanalytic Association, undated, ca late 1930s
Document in 28 pages
Language, English
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
Dr. Simmel, program articles, lectures, papers and presentations, Psychoanalysis
Dr. Simmel, Freudian Psychoanalysis, principles, conceptions and content
Deception with regard to Psychoanalysis as the Science, Dr. Simmel
Psychoanalysis is a psychosomatic and psychoanalytic treatment, discourse, Dr. Simmel
Inhibition of thoughts and actions -- reaction of an individual upon his milieu, Dr. Simmel
Five stages of a personal narrative in terms of mental discourse, Dr. Simmel
Life circles in psychoanalytic terms by Dr. Simmel
The first life circle is the family, Dr. Simmel
The second life circle is school, Dr. Simmel
The third life circle is profession, business or trade, Dr. Simmel
The forth life circle is social and societal, Dr. Simmel
The fifth life circle is love and matrimony, Dr. Simmel
The key to mastering one’s own life is to know the unconscious, Freud, by Dr. Simmel
Psychoanalysis defined correlations between organic diseases and mental diseases, Dr. Simmel
Dysfunction of the organ represents an irrational actions of the same organ within the organism
Freud's formula, the hysteric person changes a private part of himself instead of his milieu
Biological terms, transmutation of external mobility of the organism in internal mobility of organs
Mental illness and physical illness may interchange and interplay which each other, Dr. Simmel
The sense of Freud's formula, neuroses represents a reaction upon the pressure of civilization
The function of super-ego is a reflection of the childhood experience, Dr. Simmel
Sigmund Freud, Theory of Psychoanalysis
Theory and implication of Psychoanalysis
Psychoanalysis, discourse and conceptions
Theory of Psychoanalysis, narratives
RG-08.12, Dr. Simmel, Editor, Anti-Semitism, A Social Disease, A collection of essays, 1946
Prospectus, document in for pages
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Dr. Everett Clinsby (1946)
Subjects,
Antisemitism: A Social Disease, essays, edited by Dr. Simmel, 1946
Dr. Adorno, Antisemitism and Fascist Propaganda, essay in Antisemitism....
Dr. Berliner, On Some Religious Motives of Antisemitism, essay in Antisemitism....
Dr. Else Frenkel-Brunswick, The Antisemitic Personality, a Research Report, in Antisemitism...
Dr. Everett Clincby, Introductory note to Antisemitism: A Social Disease, Collection of Essay
Dr. Everett Clincby, President of the National Conference of Christians and Jews, 1946
Dr. Fenichel, Elements of Psychoanalytic Theory of Antisemitism, essay in Antisemitism...
Dr. Horkheimer, Sociological Background of the Psychoanalytic Approach, essay in Antisemitism...
Dr. Ott, Antisemitism and the Psychopathology of Everyday Life, essay, in Antisemitism...
Dr. Simmel, Antiesmitism: A Social Disease, Collection of Essays, Table of Content, 1946
Dr. Simmel, Antisemitism: A Social Disease, cover jacket pages, collection of essays, 1946
Dr. Simmel, Antisemitism and Mass Psychopathology, essay in Antisemitism....
Dr. Simmel, Introduction to Antisemitism: A Social Disease, 1946
Dr. Stanford, The Antisemitic Personality, a Research Report, essay in Antisemitism...
Gordon Allport, Preface to Antisemitism: A Social Disease, 1946
Scholarly works of Dr. Ernst Simmel, publications
Publications of International University Press, New York
Theory of Antisemitism, discourse
Applied Psychoanalysis, Theory of Antisemitism
Psychoanalysis, discourse and conceptions
RG-08.13, International University Press to Dr. Simmel, January 15, 1947
Content,
Publisher, International University Press, Inc.
Location, 227 West 13th Street, New York 11, N.Y.
Dr. Ernst Simmel
555 Wilcox Avenue
Los Angeles, 4, CA
Dear Dr. Simmel,
Thank you very much for the kind words you inscribed into the copy of Anti-Semitism you sent me.
I also enclose a letter from the Eugene Field Society that was sent to us for you.
With kindest regards,
Dr. Gertrud M. Kurth
Creator,
Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor for International University Press, Inc.
Subjects,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondences
Dr. Simmel, correspondence with Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor, Antisemitism, a Social Disease
Letter from Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor to Dr. Simmel, January 15, 1947
Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor, International University Press, Inc., New York
Dr. Simmel, publication activities, 1940s
Scholarly works of Dr. Ernst Simmel, publications
RG-08.14, Letter from Dr. Simmel to Dr. Kurth with regard to his book, January 2, 1947
Document in one page
Content, Request for the copies of the Collection of essays on antisemitism edited and contributed by him
Creators,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor for International University Press, Inc. New York (1946, 1947)
Subjects,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondences
Dr. Simmel, correspondence with Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor, Antisemitism, a Social Disease
Letter from Dr. Simmel to Dr. Kurth, request for additional copies of Antisemitism a Social Disease
A letter written by the secretary of Dr. Simmel on his behalf, January 2, 1947
Applied Psychoanalysis, Theory of Antisemitism
Theory of Antisemitism, discourse
RG-08.15, From Gordon Allport to Dr. Simmel with regard to the published book, December 23, 1946
Document in one page
Dear Dr. Simmel,
We just had the following letter from Gordon Allport, addressed to me,
Dear Dr. Kurth,
The copy of Anti-Semitism, A Social Disease which you so kindly sent to me has arrived. In print the excellent articles look even better. It is indeed a solid and praise-worthy contribution and your Press deserves thanks for making it available. It is unusually pleasing in typography and total form. Please accept my gratitude and wishes for the high success that the book deserves.
<p align="right"> Sincerely
<p align="right"> Gordon Allport
<p align="right">
This, to me, was the best Christmas gift I got and I do hope that it will compensate you a little bit for the disappointment of the delay.
With renewed wishes and kindest regards,
Sincerely yours,
International University Press
Dr. Gertrud Kurth, Editor
Creators,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor for International University Press, Inc. New York (1946, 1947)
Dr. Gordon Allport, Professor of Psychology, Harvard University
Subjects,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondences
Dr. Simmel, correspondence with Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor, Antisemitism, a Social Disease
A letter from Dr. Allport to Dr. Kurth with regard to historical value of Simme's book
Gordon Allport, Preface to Antisemitism: A Social Disease, 1946
Dr. Allport, praiseworthy note with regard to the Simmel's book
Reflections on the collection of essays, Antisemitism a Social Disease
Applied Psychoanalysis, Theory of Antisemitism
RG-08.16, Letter to Dr. Kurth from Dr. Simmel, appreciation of the recognition, December 31, 1946
Document in one page
Creators,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor for International University Press, Inc. New York (1946, 1947)
Subjects,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondences
Dr. Simmel, correspondence with Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor, Antisemitism, a Social Disease
Dr. Simmel, letters of appreciations
Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor, International University Press, Inc., New York
Applied Psychoanalysis, Theory of Antisemitism
RG-08.17, Letter to Dr. T.W. Adorno from Dr. Simmel, September 13, 1944
Dr. T.W. Adorno
316 S. Kenter Avenue
West Los Angeles, CA
Dear Dr. Adorno,
At the spring meeting of the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Society, we decided to publish or symposium on Antisemitism.
I am just beginning to tackle this job and have already talked with someone here who is interested in financing this publication. However, this man would like to see the finished product before making up his mind. I am thus writing to ask you to send me your manuscript of “The Patterns of Anti-Democratic Propaganda.”
My idea is that this publication should be concluded by a separate chapter dealing with the possibilities of counteracting Antisemitism by applying psychoanalytic principles. For this chapter, I would like every contributor to think over what practical conclusion he can derive from his own approach to the problem. What do you think about this? Would you please write a brief summary of about two pages and send it to me together with your paper.
Warm personal regards,
Sincerely yours,
Dr. Ernst Simmel
Creators,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondences
Dr. Simmel, Contributors to the collective work, Antisemitism, A Social Disease
Dr. Simmel, correspondence with Dr. T.W. Adorno, 1944
Dr. Simmel, correspondence with regard to publication of the Symposium on Antisemitism, works
Dr. Simmel preparatory works to the publication of a collective edition of Symposium on Antisemitism
Dr. T.W. Adorno, The Patterns of Anti-Democratic Propaganda, Symposium on Antisemitism, 1944
Theodor W. Adorno, studies on authoritarianism, antisemitism and propaganda
Theodor W. Adorno, philosopher, Critical Theory of Society
Theodor W. Adorno, writings on anxiety and inwardness
Theodor W. Adorno, return to West Germany in 1949
Areas of scientific interests and works of Dr. Simmel
Dr. Simmel, scientific works
Dr. Simmel, preparatory notes for scientific works
Documents from NCP-LA.info Archive
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
RG-08.18, Dr. Simmel, War Neuroses, first published in Germany, 1918
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
Affliction of ego, already damaged by military discipline, Dr. Simmel
Changes in structural edifice of the Ego, War Neuroses, Dr. Simmel
Dr. Ernst Simmel, medical officer in German army, 1914 -- 1918
Dr. Simmel, scientific works
Dr. Simmel was in charge of a military hospital for two years, the First World War
Emotional instability and irritability and a tendency to emotional outburst, war neuroses, Simmel
Human beings remain human beings, no matter of political system, Dr. Simmel
Impairment of the muscular system, war neuroses, Dr. Simmel
Mental disorders are due to pathological disturbances of the functioning of the inner super-ego
Physical and emotional exhaustion are predisposing factors for a soldier's mental breakdown in war
Soldier's achievement caused by the alteration of the ego by military discipline, Simmel
State of mind produced by military discipline enables a soldier to reach achievements with his unit
Symptomatology of war neuroses, Dr. Simmel
The external, real danger has been transformed into an inner, mental danger, War Neuroses, Simmel
The intra-mental conflict is specifically determined by the instability of the super-ego, Dr. Simmel
The nature of mental disorders in the war, Dr. Simmel
Theory and implication of Psychoanalysis
Theory of Psychoanalysis, Dr. Ernst Simmel
The super-ego forces the ego to sublimate or to repress antisocial instinctual demands, Simmel
The super-ego helps the ego to test reality and to act accordingly, Simmel
The unfair treatment of a soldier causes the loss of security and immunity against the fear
Uniformity makes him vulnerable and amenable to disintegration of his mental system, Simmel
War-Neuroses, scientific works of Dr. Simmel
War Neuroses, ego impairments, resulting in difficulties to maintain object contact, Dr. Simmel
War neuroses, ego impairments make it impossible for the soldier to attend to his military duties
War neuroses are overall identified with the traumatic neuroses acquired in peaceful time, Simmel
Wearing a uniform is the symbolic manifestation of a unity that represent him and represented by him
The affect of anxiety is of cardinal significance in the causation of all mental disorders, Simmel
Inability to react to a danger with flight or aggression causes the overload of nervous system
War Psycho-Neuroses, terminology, Dr. Simmel
The armies of totalitarian states are better trained for they are organized on a discipline premise
When civilian becomes a soldier, he carries out the already existing ideology, Simmel
An inner struggle of the ego to maintain itself, that is, its psychological entity, Dr. Simmel
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
Documents from NCP-LA.info Archive
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
RG-08.19, A letter to Dr. Simmel from Dr. Kurth, editor of his book, July 7, 1946
Document in one page
Creator,
Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor for International University Press, Inc. New York (1946, 1947)
Subjects,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondences
Dr. Simmel, correspondence with Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor, Antisemitism, a Social Disease
Dr. Simmel, Antisemitism -- A Social Disease, monograph in English, published in United States
Dr. Simmel, Antisemitism and Mass Psychopathology, essay in Antisemitism....
Antisemitism: A Social Disease, essays, edited by Dr. Simmel, 1946
Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor, International University Press, Inc., New York
Letter from Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor to Dr. Simmel, June 7, 1946
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
Documents from NCP-LA.info Archive
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
RG-08.20, A letter to Dr. Simmel from Dr. Siegfried Bernfeld, in German, ca 1946
Document in German, one page
Creator,
Dr. Siegfried Bernfeld, psychoanalyst, scholar (1892 -- 1953)
Subjects,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondences
Dr. Simmel, correspondence with Dr. Bernfeld in German
A letter from Dr. Bernfeld to Dr. Simmel in German, ca 1946
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Bernfeld
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
Documents from NCP-LA.info Archive
RG-08.21, Letter from Dr. Simmel to Dr. Tidd, November 1, 1940
Content,
Inquiry of Tidd’s opinion with regard to Menningers perception of associate membership
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
Documents from NCP-LA.info Archive
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Dr. Ernst Simmel, a letter to Dr. Tidd, November 1, 1940
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondences
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondence with Dr. Tidd
Dr. Simmel to the question of associate membership, limiting this membership, a letter
Menninger about limiting of associate membership for Los Angeles, a letter from Simmel
Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles, associate membership, a question of limiting it, Simmel
RG-08.21, Letter from Dr. Simmel to Dr. Tidd, related to Committee of Certification, January 11, 1941
Document in one page
RG-08.22, A letter from Dr. Siegfried Bernfeld to Dr. Simmel, September 18, 1944
Dr. Bernfeld declines submission of an essay to the collective work Antisemitism – A Social Disease
Document in one page
Creator,
Dr. Siegfried Bernfeld, psychoanalyst, scholar (1892 -- 1953)
Subjects,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondences
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondence with Dr. Bernfeld in English
Dr. Bernfeld, a letter to Dr. Simmel, a decline to contribute an article, September 18, 1944
Dr. Bernfeld declines to contribute an article to Antisemitism: A Social Disease, letter to Simmel
Dr. Bernfeld, correspondences
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Bernfeld
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
Documents from NCP-LA.info Archive
RG-08.23, A letter from Dr. Simmel to Dr. Bernfeld, September 12, 1944
Dr. Simmel writes about including the Dr. Bernfeld’s transcript from the Symposium on Antisemitism
Document in two pages
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondences
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondence with Dr. Bernfeld in English
Dr. Simmel, proposing to Dr. Bernfeld to contribute an article to Antisemitism: A Social Disease
Dr. Simmel, asking Dr..Bernfeld for a manuscript of a prospective article, corrected from his talk
Dr. Simmel, explanation to Dr. Bernfeld to his inquiry of the APA roster, September 12, 1944
Dr. Simmel preparatory works to the publication of a collective edition of Symposium on Antisemitism
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Bernfeld
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
Documents from NCP-LA.info Archive
RG-08.24, A Letter from Dr. Simmel to Dr. Tidd, related to Committee of Certification, January 11, 1941
Document in one page
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondences
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondence with Dr. Tidd
Dr. Simmel, letter to Dr. Tidd, January 11, 1941
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive, Dr. Tidd
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
Documents from NCP-LA.info Archive
RG-08.25, A letter to Dr. Kurth from Dr. Simmel, A list of contributors, June 10, 1946
Dr. Simmel writes to the editor Dr. Kurth attaching the list of contributors to the collective work Antisemitism – A Social Disease
Document in two pages
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, correspondences
Dr. Simmel, correspondence with Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor, Antisemitism, a Social Disease
Dr. Simmel, letter to Dr. Gertrud Kurth, publishing editor, June 10, 1946
Dr. Simmel, List of contributors to Antisemitism, A Social Disease, June 10, 1946
Gordon Allport, Preface to Antisemitism: A Social Disease, 1946
Dr. Adorno, Antisemitism and Fascist Propaganda, essay in Antisemitism....
Dr. Else Frenkel-Brunswick, The Antisemitic Personality, a Research Report, in Antisemitism...
Dr. Douglass Orr, contributor to Antisemitism, A Social Disease, 1946
Dr. Berliner, On Some Religious Motives of Antisemitism, essay in Antisemitism....
Dr. Fenichel, Elements of Psychoanalytic Theory of Antisemitism, essay in Antisemitism...
Dr. Horkheimer, Sociological Background of the Psychoanalytic Approach, essay in Antisemitism...
Nevitt Sanford, contributor to Antisemitism, A Social Disease
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Dr. Simmel, Antisemitism -- A Social Disease, monograph in English, published in United States
Antisemitism: A Social Disease, essays, edited by Dr. Simmel, 1946
Dr. Simmel preparatory works to the publication of a collective edition of Symposium on Antisemitism
Dr. Simmel, Introduction to Antisemitism: A Social Disease, 1946
Dr. Simmel, Antisemitism and Mass Psychopathology, a chapter
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive, Dr. Gertrud Kurth
RG-08.26, Dr. Simmel, Psychischen Traumas für die Entstehung und Heilung von Kriegsneurosen, 1918
Mental Traumas and the Formation and Healing of the War Neuroses
Publication in 84 pages
Munich, Leipzig, 1918
RG-08.27, Dr. Simmel, Etiology of Dementia Parecox, inaugural dissertation, 1908
Critical contribution to Ätiologie der Dementia praecox or in English translation Etiology of Dementia “Precocious Madness,” Germany, 1908
Brochure (document) in 63 pages
Published in Rostock, Germany in 1908
Defended in University of Rostock
Language, German
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
Dr. Simmel, scientific works
Dr. Ernst Simmel, Inaugural Dissertation, Etiology of Dementia Praecox, in German, 1908
Dr. Simmel, Inaugural Dissertation, University of Rostock, 1908
Dementia Praecox, premature dementia, terminology
Kraepelinian dichotomy, terminology
Psychopathology, a study of mental disease, terminology
Dementia Praecox, a biological disorder, not the product of psychological trauma, discourse
Dr. Kraepelin, prospective treatment of Dementia Praecox, history
Scientific works of Dr. Simmel in German, German period
Dr. Ernst Simmel, German period, Rostock, Berlin, scientific work, discourse
Dr. Simmel, Etiology of Dementia Praecox, discourse and research, 1908
Theory of Psychoanalysis, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Theory and research in psychiatry
Theory and research in Psychiatry, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
Documents from NCP-LA.info Archive
RG-08.28, Dr. Simmel, Self-Preservation and the Death Instinct, reprint, 1944
Reprint from The Psychoanalytic Quarterly, Vol. XIII, 1944
Brochure (document) in 27 pages
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
An effective superego can provide the ego with temporary instinct security, Simmel, discourse
An instinct appears to us as a borderland concept between the mental and physical, Freud
Anxiety is a specific phenomenon of a quantitative disturbance of the narcissistic libido, Simmel
A tendency to keep the libidinal tension within the ego beyond the Unlust, unpleasure, experienced
Conflict between the Ego and the Sexual Instinct, Freud
Destructive energies is a manifestation of an instinct of self-preservation, Simmel
Dr. Ernst Simmel, Self-Preservation and the Death Instinct, article, 1944
Dr. Simmel, Scientific works, abstracts
Dr. Simmel, Theories of Libido and Instinct, discourse
Dualistic theory of instincts, Dr. Simmel, discourse
Dualistic concept of ego self-preservation versus Id instinctual claims, Freud
External object reality and internal instinct psychic reality establish superego, Simmel, discourse
Extra-individual life is also responsible for all intra-individual disturbances, Simmel, discourse
Fear, a perception that there is no friendly object available to bring about a release, Simmel
Fear of annihilation or death results form the concomitant perception of an object stronger than Ego
Hate is the emotional expression of demands of the gastrointestinal zone, Simmel, discourse
Infant regains general instinct repose through the satiation of gastrointestinal tract, Simmel
Libido as a psychological energy was primarily objectless, Dr. Simmel, discourse
Libido could be considered the dynamic cause of such ego manifestation as hypochondria, psychoses
Libido could be sent out or withdrawn by the ego in accordance with its needs, Dr. Simmel, discourse
Libido is first and foremost narcissistic libido, Simmel, discourse
Libido is the investment of energy directed by the ego to the object of its sexual desire, Freud
Love is the emotional expression of the genital zone, Simmel, discourse
Mature and healthy ego is unaware of itself while functioning with demands of object reality
Mouth and Anus are terminal parts that establish contacts with the object world, Simmel, discourse
Normal and abnormal phenomena of mental life are exemplified by conflict of two instinct primacies
Perception of Anxiety constitutes the danger situation for the ego, Dr. Simmel, discourse
Psycho-neurotic and psychotic disorders arise from the struggle of the ego to fight off anxiety
Psychoneurotic disorders result from the ego's need to set defense mechanism in motion
Quantitative distribution of narcissistic libido within the ego, Dr. Simmel, discourse
Rage is considered an emotional manifestation of a disturbed narcissistic equilibrium, Simmel
Self-preservation indicates the ego's tendency to keep itself free from anxiety, Simmel, discourse
Self-preservation is the preservation or reestablishment of the ego's narcissistic equilibrium
Struggle for reduction, keeping a constant level or removal of the inner stimulus tension, Simmel
Tendency to destruction of the object for object destruction serves for self-preservation, Simmel
The ascent from primitive object relationship by hatred to a civilized object relationship by love
The ego caught in the conflict between object-frustration and libidinal claims is in danger, Simmel
The Ego in all its conflicts can have no other goal than to maintain itself, Freud
The Ego must strive to keep up its inner narcissistic libido impulses, Dr. Simmel, discourse
The gastrointestinal primacy of our libido exerts its instinctual power, Simmel, discourse
The gastrointestinal primacy operates as the primitive agent of our libido, Simmel, discourse
The gastrointestinal stage of libido organization is the most primitive one, thesis, Simmel
The instinct of self-preservation as the sex instinct strives at the synthesis of living substances
The instinct of self-preservation is within the individual, Simmel, discourse
The intestinal primacy becomes subordinated to the genital primacy in the maturing process, Simmel
The most primitive stage of libido development is not the oral, but the gastrointestinal libido
The object of self-preservation instinct is food, Dr. Simmel, discourse
The organic source of self-preservation instinct is gastrointestinal tract, Dr. Simmel, discourse
The origin of self-preservation instinct is to devour, Dr. Simmel, discourse
The sex instincts extend beyond the borderline of the individual, Simmel, discourse
The superego is a compromise formation, Dr. Simmel, discourse
The Theory of psychoneuroses and psychoses, discourse
The theory of psychoneuroses and psychoses, Dr. Simmel, discourse
Ego tends to abandon its genital libido primacy in an exchange for gastrointestinal libido primacy
Object love frustration implies that the ego tends to reinstate the condition of the instinct repose
Nirvana, i.e., the condition of the instinct repose is the attraction of all regressive trends
In the narcissistic neuroses and psychoses the ego has abandoned the genital primacy, Simmel
In the narcissistic neuroses and psychoses the ego has given in to the gastrointestinal primacy
Manifestation of the neuroses and psychoses reflect a defense of the ego against the danger, Simmel
The conflict of the ego delineates the state of being caught between two alternatives, Simmel
Ego caught between two alternatives, that of preserving the frustrating object and preserving itself
The ego traverses from the transference neuroses via the narcissistic neuroses to the psychoses
In the transference neuroses the ego decides in favor of love and security, Simmel, discourse
A compulsive neurotic is capable of preserving his object by discharging his hatred in his thinking
The libido is withdrawn from the object and placed upon the ego that substitutes for the object
The ego is tortured by gnawings of conscience or remorse, Simmel, discourse
The manic state represents the fusion of ego and superego, Simmel, discourse
The process of defusion of constructive and destructive energies corresponds with regression itself
Object frustration, theory and discourse, Dr. Ernst Simmel
The first object conflict in life results in keeping the devouring instinct in the unconscious
The conflict of ambivalence is a determining factor in the symptomatology of mental disorders
The thwarting of the erotic gratification provokes a route of aggressiveness against who interfered
The conscience was formed in the beginning from the suppression of an aggressive impulse, Simmel
The superego came into existence through the process of identification, Simmel, discourse
Destructive instincts in the psyche of individuals affecting intrapersonal, interpersonal conflicts
Theory of Psychoanalysis, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
Documents from NCP-LA.info Archive
RG-08.29, Dr. Simmel, Phenomenon of Acting Out, paper, 1936
This Paper was presented for California Psychoanalytic Conference in San Francisco in 1936
Language, English
Document in nine pages
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
Acting out could be viewed out of repression, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Acting out in the form of playing prevents an actual conflict from becoming introverted, Simmel
Dr. Ernst Simmel, The Phenomenon of Acting Out, article
Dr. Simmel, scientific works
Formation of symptoms is brought about by failure of repression, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Guilt feeling and fear of one’s own conscience is not identical, Simmel, discourse
In play the child tries to repeat actively what it was submitted to passively of his weakness Simmel
In the child's mental system there is no demarcation between conscious, preconscious and unconscious
Phenomenon of acting out, terminology, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Phenomenon of symptom formation, terminology, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Repression can only take place after the development of the Super Ego function, Freud
Repression derives from a clash with reality to protect the Ego from the pressure of Id, terminology
Repression is a defense mechanism of the Ego, terminology, Dr. Ernst Simmel
The child actual reality and psychic reality can be identical, Freud
The neurotic symptoms also satisfy the Super Ego as a representative of reality, discourse, Simmel
The neurotic symptoms is a compromise formation, somewhat satisfying the Id, terminology, Simmel
The fear of frustration and the threatening outcome from the ego, Simmel, discourse
The person changes object love into identification love, Simmel, discourse
It deserves a special investigation in how far anxiety can be avoided through acting out, Simmel
Acting out in psychoanalysis is the repetition of acting out in childhood, Simmel, discourse
In childhood children act out instinctual drives before they become repressed, Simmel, discourse
Theory of Psychoanalysis, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
Documents from NCP-LA.info Archive
RG-08.30, Foster Parents' Plan for War Children, 1941
An appeal composed by Edna Blue, Executive Chairman
The document informs that by the efforts undertaken by Anna Freud, Dorothy Burlingham and Lilian Lyon, a Recuperation Center h for the families who have been bombed was opened in England.
It is an appeal to collect funds
Document in two pages, in English
Creator,
Edna Blue, executive chairman
Subjects,
Foster Parents' Plan for War Children, humanitarian organization
Recuperation Center for accommodation of the families whose houses had been bombed out, 1941
Founders of the Recuperation Center, England, Anna Freud, Dorothy Borlingham, Lilian Bowes, 1941
The Foster Parents' Plan pledges support to the Recuperation Center in England, 1941
Appeal for financial support for the Recuperation Center in England, 1941
American Committee for the Foster Parents' Plan for War Children, 1941
Eric Muggeridge, executive secretary, Foster Parents Plan, American Committee, 1941
Josep Gelabert, chairman, Foster Parents' Plan, American Committee
Edna Blue, executive chairman, Foster Parents' Plan, American Committee, 1941
Walter Bluh, treasure, Foster Parents' Plan, American Committee, 1941
Ludwig Prosnitz, auditor, Foster Parents' Plan, American Committee, 1941
John Langdon, Founder, Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
J.B. Priestely, chairman, Foster Parents Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Vernon Bartlett, M.P., Vice Chairman, Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Sydney Bernstein, treasure, Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Dorothy Morland, honorary secretary, Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
The Duchess of Atholl, Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
The Earl of Listowel, Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Captain J.R.J. Macnamara, Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Frencis Meynell, Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Lady O'conor, Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Eleanor Rathbone, M.P., Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Sir Richard Ress, Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Wilfrid Roberts, M.P., Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Dr. Audrey Russell, Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Stephen Spender, Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Dame Sybil Thorndike, Foster Parents' Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Edith Pye, Foster Parents Plan, British Headquarters, 1941
Humanitarian and charitable organization, UK and America
Documents, Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles, membership lists
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
Documents from NCP-LA.info Archive
RG-08.31, Dr. Ernst Simmel, photograph, ca 1920s
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947) Organstoerungen
Subjects,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, photographs, German period
Dr. Simmel, scholarly productive German period, 1919-1934
Dr. Ernst Simmel, personal photographs
Dr. Ernst Simmel, photo-documents
Personal History, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
Documents from NCP-LA.info Archive
RG-08.32, Dr. Simmel, unpublished and published works, in German and English, 1909 – 1947
Bibliography, compiled in the 1960s
Rubrics,
Untranslated papers
Lectures and Presentations
Publications
Discourses
Language, German and English
Document in four pages
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
Dr. Simmel, Analysis of Numbers in a Dream, lecture, May 6, 1924
Dr. Simmel, An Observation on the Id in a Parapraxis, lecture, November 1922
Dr. Simmel, Bibliography of published and unpublished scholarly works, German and English
Dr. Simmel, bibliography of scholarly works in German and English, 1900 -- 1947
Dr. Simmel, Communication of a Dream containing the entire Oedipus Complex, lecture November 4, 1923
Dr. Simmel, Congress Paper, Psychoanalytic Observations on the Origin and Progress of Disease, 1922
Dr. Simmel, Congress Paper, The psycho-physical significance of the intestinal organs in repression
Dr. Simmel, Die psychoanalytische Behandlung in der Klinik, 1928, 14, 352 - 370
Dr. Simmel, Eroeffnung einer psychoanalytischen Klinik in Berlin, publication, 1927, 13: 245-246
Dr. Simmel, From Analysis of the Painter, lecture, September 24, 1920, in German
Dr. Simmel, Kritischer Beitrag zur Aetiologie der Dementia Praecox, inaugural dissertation, 1909, 63
Dr. Simmel, lectures and presentations, 1919 -- 1931, translated from German titles
Dr. Simmel, Manuscripts, unpublished works in English, 1936 -- 1947
Dr. Simmel, Methode und Indikation in der Psychoanlyse, 1927. 4: 28 - 39
Dr. Simmel, Methode und Indikation in der Psychoanlyse, 1927. Discussion, 93 - 103
Dr. Simmel, On a Displacement of Sexual Resistance to the Intellectual Field, lecture, May 13, 1923
Dr. Simmel, On the Intestinal Conquest of Libido, lecture, May 15, 1923
Dr. Simmel, Praegenitalprimat und intestinale Stufe der Libidoorganization, publication, 1933, 19
Dr. Simmel, Prinzipielle Gesichtspunkte fuer die Durchfuehrung der psychoanalytische Behandlung 1927
Dr. Simmel, Psychoanalyse der Massen, publication, Vossische Zeitung, Berlin, 1919
Dr. Simmel, Psychoanalysis of a Gambler, lecture, October 14, 1919 in German
Dr. Simmel, Psychoanalytische Gesichtspunkte fuer die Psychosenbehandlung, publication, 1929, 53: 60
Dr. Simmel, Psychoanalytische Gesichtspunkte zu Psychotherpie der Psychose, publication, 1929
Dr. Simmel, Psychoanalytische Voraussetzungen fuer die Behandlung der Schizophrenie, 1929, 15: 516
Dr. Simmel, publications in German and English, 1900 -- 1947
Dr. Simmel, published works in German, 1900 -- 1935
Dr. Simmel, scientific works
Dr. Simmel, The Case of a Patient who did not Speak, lecture, January 24, 1922
Dr. Simmel, The Psychoanalysis of the Tic, lecture, March 17, 1921, in German
Dr. Simmel, Ueber die Psychognese von Organstoerungen und ihre psychanalytische Behandlung, 1931
Dr. Simmel, Ueber Psychoanalyze -- Gedanen zur Zeit, publication, Frankfurt am Main, 1929
Dr. Simmel, Zum Problem von Zwang und Sucht, publciation, 1930
Dr. Simmel, Zur Psychoanalyse des Spielers, publication, 1920, 8 - 11
Dr. Simmel, Zur Psychologie der Geschlecter. Zwei Radiovortraege, 1933, 5: 285 - 301
Dr. Simmels, Comments on the dreams of a female epileptic patient, lecture, February 14, 1922
Dr. Simmel, Two lectures on Psychoanalysis and Education, lecture, April 1925
Dr. Simmel, The Doctor Game, Repetition, Compulsion and the Profession of Medicine, lecture, May1926
Dr. Simmel, On Lay Analysis, lecture, February 26, 1926
Dr. Simmel, Congress paper, Basic psychoanalytic principles in the treatment of schizophrenia, 1927
Dr. Simmel, Basic principles in conducting psychoanalytic treatment in a hospital, paper, 1929
Dr. Simmel, Psychogenesis and Psychotherapy of Organ Sickness, paper
Dr. Simmel, Congress paper, Addiction, paper, September 28, 1930
Dr. Ernst Simmel, Curriculum Vitae, 1920s, 1930s
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
RG-08.33, A Psychological Radio Offence against Germany, preparatory narrative, ca 1941
Document in 47 pages
Language, English
Creator,
Dr. Ernst Simmel, scholar, psychoanalyst, founder of the Schloss Tegel hospital (1882 --1947)
Subjects,
An average German citizen is already fixated on Hitler, Simmel, 1941
Dr. Simmel, Psychological Offensive, discourse and connotation
Dr. Simmel, scientific works
Hitler isolated every individual emotionally by inducing him to distrust his neighbors and friends
In short psychotherapy we bring them active help to change unsatisfactory reality, Simmel
In short psychotherapy we help patients not only to recognize reality but support him externally
Normality, described in psychoanalytic terms, signifies that the Ego is capable of testing reality
Normality, in psychoanalytic terms, infers ability of ego to test reality and act accordingly Simmel
Our intention is to take away the German people transference to Hitler and attach it to us, Simmel
Panic is a mental condition brought about by a situation of helplessness, Simmel
Psychological broadcasts, delusion of Fata Morgana -- a Greater Germany, Simmel
Psychological broadcasts, Germans against Germans, Dr. Simmel
Psychological broadcasts, Hitler considers Germany a part of his own Ego, Dr. Simmel
Psychological broadcasts, Hitler is the representative of the old order, the policy of disaster
Psychological broadcasts, Hitler jeopardizes the very existence of Germany, Dr. Simmel
Psychological broadcasts, the errors committed by other countries created a desperate situation
Psychological offensive on Germany must be unconcealed and open attempt to contact public opinion
Psychological offensive on Germany shall not be disguised, Simmel
Psychological warfare, radio broadcasts in German, Dr. Simmel, 1941
Psychological warfare is to disintegrate the individual mental system and hinder collective action
The broadcaster must claim for himself the place within the superego of the Germans, Simmel
The message for dissenters in Germany, we fight for their as well as for our own liberty, Simmel
The message to the dissenters in Germany is our encouragement, Psychological warfare, Simmel
The parent who provides security gives love and receives love in return, Dr. Simmel
The prohibition to speak, i.e. verbalize feelings must have led retroactively to inhibition to think
The purpose of psychological warfare is to demoralize Home Front, Dr. Simmel
The second category of listeners are those who suffer from the Nazi regime but have no clear concept
The Superego of the Germans had been usurped by Hitler, Simmel
The terror, a cowardly attack of several armed individuals on a single unarmed one, Dr. Simmel
The terror creates artificial loyalty arising from fear, Dr. Simmel
The terror is the most despicable of all weapons, Dr. Simmel
We have to show that the first ruthless German psychological offensive was launched against Germans
Dr. Simmel, Revealing deceptive Nazi ideology in personal discourse
Dr. Simmel, Nazis shift the emphasis from actual issues to personal matters, personal discourse
Nazi speakers obeyed the orders of their commanders, typology of Nazi ideology, Simmel
Dr. Simmel, the most effective psychological weapon of Hitler is antisemitism, discourse
Dr. Simmel, to eradicate Hitler's antithesis that America is governed by Jews, discourse
Dr. Simmel, Antisemitism is a powerful instrument in Nazi propaganda, discourse
No American broadcaster need feel ashamed of sympathizing with the German Jews persecuted by Hitler
Nazi fiction of International Jewry as inimical to the German race, Nazi psychological warfare
Jews within Germany can always be blamed when external enemies gain in victories or prestige
Dr. Simmel, aggressive-destructive energies has been stirred up in the minds of German people
The problem of antisemitism to be used by broadcasters to re-erect a civilized super ego in Germans
An example of honorable Austrian officer who dared protect a Jew after the German invasion of Vienna
Austrian officer to a Jewish gentleman, please accept my apologies in the name of German people
Every German who sees a yellow star on the sleeve of a Jewish fellow-man should be ashamed, Simmel
Dr. Simmel, the yellow star is not a defamation of the Jews, it is the defamation of Germany
Everyone who sees a yellow star should if only in his heart apologize in the name of German people
Nazis misuse the inhibitory effect that symbols exert on the intellectual capacity of judging
Arrogance in replacing the traditional German greeting Gruess Gott by Heil Hitler, Dr. Simmel
Dr. Simmel, Psychological Broadcasts, quotations from Lessing, Fichte, Kant should be given
Dr. Simmel, Psychological broadcasts, poems like Heine should be recited
Dr. Simmel, Psychological broadcasts, music by Mendelsohn should be played
Dr. Simmel, Psychological Broadcasts, the great German dramatist Schiller should be well represented
Dr. Simmel, Psychological Broadcasts, Schiller, "Wilhelm Tell", overthrow of the tyrant
Dr. Simmel, Roosevelt-Churchill program could not be suitable to arouse a rebel passion in Germans
The Roosevelt-Churchill program of Germany lacks concreteness and leaves it open to misinterpretation
Dr. Simmel, it is well-calculated idea of Hitler to give Pax Germanica the name of The New Order
If the Republican regime has failed in Germany, it was not because Democracy failed, Simmel
Dr. Simmel, the German people did not make the right use of Democracy thus failing Republican regime
German Democracy strove against fascism but found no support from the great powers, Simmel
For Germans the abstract terms of Peace and Democracy have had a negative connotation up to present
Peace after war is possible if relations between nations are regulated by International Parliament
Documents from the NCP Archive, Dr. Ernst Simmel
Documents from the NCP-LA Archive
- Scientific works such as monographs, essays, articles and notes;
- Unpublished manuscripts, prepared in Los Angeles, some of them did not see publications;
- Official correspondences of behalf of the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles;
- Narratives related to scientific, business and council meeting of the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles;
- Preparatory substantiations for the establishment of Psychoanalytic Institute and Psychoanalytic Foundation in Los Angeles;
- Personal correspondences with colleagues and scholars, largely related to the Science of Psychoanalysis;
- Public lectures, presentation and speeches also related to the Science of Psychoanalysis
- Drafts of articles, essays and monographs and editorial work on them
It is estimated that the number of Dr. Simmel's various Papers being archived at the New Center for Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles amounted to 8000 pages of documents.
- Official correspondences of behalf of the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles;
- Narratives related to scientific, business and council meeting of the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles;
- Preparatory substantiations for the establishment of Psychoanalytic Institutute and Psychoanalytic Foundation in Los Aangles;
- Personal correspondences with colleagues and scholars, largely related to the Science of Psychoanalysis;
- Public lectures, presentation and speeches also related to the Science of Psychoanalysis
- Drafts of articles, essays and monographs and editorial work on them
It is estimated that the number of Dr. Simmel's various Papers being archived at the New Center for Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles amounted to 8000 pages of documents.
Category of sources,
Correspondences during the course of Dr. Simmel activities in organizing, teaching and writing. He exchanged letters with analytic colleagues on international scale, Sigmund Freud included.
Dr. Simmel corresponded with Dr. Karl Abraham, Dr. Sachs, Dr. Ernest Jones, Dr. Edward Glover, Dr. Anna Freud, Princess Marie Bonoparte.
Correspondences during the Topeka Period
Correspondences with the San Francisco colleagues, including Dr. Bernfeld, Dr. Windholz, Dr. Kasanin, Dr. Erikson
Lectures and Presentations
Bibiography of his works compiled by himself for the period of 1908 to 1946
The Greensteinn index of Dr. Simmel's publications in German comprises 27 papers
SIMMEL, ERNST (1882-1947)
Neurologist and psychoanalyst Ernst Simmel was born on April 4, 1882, in Breslau, Germany (now Wroclaw, Poland) and died in Los Angeles on November 11, 1947.
From a Jewish background, Simmel was the youngest of nine children. His father, Siegfried, was a banker; his mother, Johanna, managed an employment agency for domestic servants.
What are we to do now when we have lost Ernst Simmel and leadership?
We want to continue to follow the spirit of his leadership, to identify ourselves with him and his constructive plans."
After studying medicine and psychiatry in Berlin and Rostock, Simmel received his medical degree in 1908; his dissertation concerned the psychogenic etiology of dementia praecox. Early in his career he worked as a general practitioner in Berlin. During World War I, however, he served as military doctor and chief of a hospital for psychiatric battle casualties in Posen. There he introduced the use of psychodynamic principles; at the time, he was still self-taught in psychoanalysis.
Returning to Berlin after the war, Simmel underwent a didactic analysis with Karl Abraham in 1919. Together with Abraham and Max Eitington, he helped establish the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute in 1920. He served as president of the Berlin Psychoanalytic Society from 1926 to 1930, and founded and served as chief physician of the Tegel sanitarium Schloss Tegel, outside Berlin, in 1927. The sanatorium, the first ever designed to employ psychoanalytic principles in treating patients who might benefit from observation, went bankrupt and closed in 1931.
In 1910, Simmel married Alice Seckelson, and the couple would have two sons. In 1929 he married his second wife, Hertha Brüggemann.
Simmel, a liberal who had helped to found the Society of Socialist Physicians and served as its president from 1924 to 1933, ran afoul of Nazi authorities soon after Hitler came to power in 1933. Emigrating to the United States in 1934, he moved to Los Angeles after a brief period at the Topeka Psychoanalytic Institute. He was instrumental in founding the Los Angeles Psychoanalytic Institute soon after the Second World War; he also helped establish the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Society, and served as its first president.
Simmel published both clinical and theoretical papers. On the Psychoanalysis of War Neuroses (1921) became a classic. His 1927 lecture at the Innsbruck Congress on the use of psychoanalytic principles in treating institutionalized patients was also highly original. A major theoretical contribution is "Self-Preservation and the Death Instinct," published in 1944. Another significant contribution to theory was Simmel's hypothesis concerning the existence of pre-oedipal anal libido, germane to certain psychosomatic and psychotic disorders. These ideas would find resonance in the work of Melanie Klein, Wilfred Bion, and Donald Meltzer.
Simmel also published some thirty original works on social issues, clinical problems, and matters of mental health policy. He is important both as a founder of the institutions noted above and for establishing a place for psychoanalysis in health care and suggesting its applications to clinical medicine. Many of his works concern psychosomatic medicine, including his "Über die Psychogenese von Organstörungen und ihre psychoanalytische Behandlung" (The Psychogenesis of Organic Disturbances and Their Psychoanalytic treatment") from 1931. He edited the anthology Anti-Semitism. A Social Disease, published in 1946. Psychoanalyse und ihre Anwendungen [Psychoanalysis and its applications], a collection of numerous abstracts, lectures, and unpublished manuscripts, appeared in 1993.
Dr. David Brunswick, one of the founders of the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles, friend and colleague of Dr. Ernst Simmel in December 1947, in his speech in Memoriam of Dr. Ernst Simmel, has said,
"I first met Ernst Simmel at his psychoanalytic sanitarium at Schloss Tegel in Berlin in the Spring of 1930. He impressed me as a very friendly man, with dignity and a great deal of energy and vey intelligent.
Early in 1933, after National Socialists in Germany had begun persecuted Jews, it soon appeared that Germany would lose a great number of its professional for their only Jewish origin.
A small group of us, psychoanalysts practicing in Los Angeles, the nucleous of the Psychoanalytic Study Group, decided to invite one of the German psychoanalyts to settle here to help us learn more and to help bring order and organization into the psychoanalytic field in Los Angeles.
I thought at once of Simmel. Franz Alexander in Chicago and Professor Paul Epstein, Dr. Hans Sachs deicisively backed up our choice of Simmel.
We invited Dr. Simmel and after the usual vicissitudes of escape from Nazi Germany and trouble over the United States immigration visa, he and his wife and their two-year-old son arrived in Los Angeles at the end of April 1934 and rom that time I counted him among my friends.
We were never disappointed in Dr. Simmel' abilities and he organized for us and led our Psychoanalytic Study Group and then also when the time was ripe, the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Society, the Los Angeles Psychoanalytic Society and the Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis. We must blame ourselves, I believe, for the fact that he was not able to found here two other organizations, namely a psychoanalytic clinic and a psychoanalytic sanitarium, both much needed and both so dear to him."
Additional bibliographic notes,
in 1913 he began his private practice in general medicine. He chose a modest suburb of Berlin, because he was not interseted in a lucrtive practice. It is noteworthy that the young physician, whose medical thinking had been shaped by the exlusively organic and descriptive teaching then prevailing, was sufficiently alert and open-minded to recognize the validity fo the Freudean approach and its application to Dementia Praecox, as suggested by Jung. He foresaw that these theories were to open new vistas for research and an understanding of mental phenomena.
In the course of the First World War, he was at first a general medical officer with combat troops. In 1916, he was placed in charge of a special military hospital for war neuroses. It was here that his career as a psychotherapist and psycho-analyst was initiated. He laucned upon a trail-blazing activity, using hyponosis in combination with comprehension of psycho-analytic dynamics in the treatment of soldiers suffering from war neuroses. In essense, the methods used in the Second World War were identical with those initiated by Simmel twenty-five years earlier. It is a striking commentary on Ernst Simmel's vision, skills and courage that he employed these technicques at a time when this area was truly terra incognita.
His experience in the First World War were summarized in this Paper, The Inter-Relationship of War Neuroses and Mental Trauma -- A Hypno-Analytic Research. For this work, he was awarded the Freud Prize in 1918.
After the war , he returned to Berlin and resumed private practice. From this time on, his career branched out from his own practice of psychiatry and psycho-analysis into research, teaching and organizing on an extensive scale.
Simmel was one of the founder of the Berlin Psycho-Analytic Institute. He was instrumental in developing some of the fundamental principles for trainign psycho-analysts, through participation in the establishment of the first education committee in Berlin, he worked out the initial trainign curriculum. In this connection, he introduced the plan of supervised analyses and case siminars.
In 1927 at Schloss Tegel, near Berlin, Ernst Simmel founded the first sanitarium operating on psycho-analytic principles. As its medical director he not only treated patients psychoanalytically, but also devised methods of occupational therapy based on metapsychological principles. Cases admitted for treatment at this institution included patients suffering from somatic diseases, addictions, border-line schizophrenia and sexual criminal offenders.
Simmel was invited to come to Southern California in 1934 to establish an institute to train psychiatrists in psychoanalysis. Here he became the official representative of the Chicago Psychoanalytic Institute. Herganized the few trained analysts then in California into the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles and later he was the organizer of the San Francisco and the Los Angeles Psychoanalytic Societies. He introduced and conducted the first psychoanalytic seminars for teachers and social workers and eventually evolved a program to train psychiatrists in Psychoanalysis.
It was largely due to his efforts that Psychoanalysis achieved scientific approbation in the eyes of the public and of the medical profession in California.
For years he tried to establish a Psychoanalytic Institute in Southern California for training and teaching, as well as for research based on data gathered in psychoanalytic hospital and free clinic.
Unfortunately, circumstances permitted only the establishment of a singel department of such an institute, namely a school to train psychiatrists in Psychoanalysis. It was one of the disappointments that darkened the last months of his life and his dream of an institute to further and safeguard the Psychoanalytic Movement in Southern California was not realized.
Simmel's scientific publications number more than sixty. The problem with wchich he was chiefly concerned can be classified under the following headings,
-war neuroses,
- institutiona psychoanalytic treatment,
-therapy for psychoses,
-the psychogenesis for organic diseases,
--psycho-somatic medicine,
- application of psychoanalysis in criminology,,
-varia
Neurologist and psychoanalyst Ernst Simmel was born on April 4, 1882, in Breslau, Germany (now Wroclaw, Poland) and died in Los Angeles on November 11, 1947.
From a Jewish background, Simmel was the youngest of nine children. His father, Siegfried, was a banker; his mother, Johanna, managed an employment agency for domestic servants.
After studying medicine and psychiatry in Berlin and Rostock, Simmel received his medical degree in 1908; his dissertation concerned the psychogenic etiology of dementia praecox. Early in his career he worked as a general practitioner in Berlin. During World War I, however, he served as military doctor and chief of a hospital for psychiatric battle casualties in Posen. There he introduced the use of psychodynamic principles; at the time, he was still self-taught in psychoanalysis.
Returning to Berlin after the war, Simmel underwent a didactic analysis with Karl Abraham in 1919. Together with Abraham and Max Eitington, he helped establish the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute in 1920. He served as president of the Berlin Psychoanalytic Society from 1926 to 1930, and founded and served as chief physician of the Tegel sanatoriumat Schloss Tegel, outside Berlin, in 1927. The sanatorium, the first ever designed to employ psychoanalytic principles in treating patients who might benefit from observation, went bankrupt and closed in 1931.
In 1910, Simmel married Alice Seckelson, and the couple would have two sons. In 1929 he married his second wife, Hertha Brüggemann.
Simmel, a liberal who had helped to found the Society of Socialist Physicians and served as its president from 1924 to 1933, ran afoul of Nazi authorities soon after Hitler came to power in 1933. Emigrating to the United States in 1934, he moved to Los Angeles after a brief period at the Topeka Psychoanalytic Institute. He was instrumental in founding the Los Angeles Psychoanalytic Institute soon after the Second World War; he also helped establish the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Society, and served as its first president.
Simmel published both clinical and theoretical papers. On the Psychoanalysis of War Neuroses (1921) became a classic. His 1927 lecture at the Innsbruck Congress on the use of psychoanalytic principles in treating institutionalized patients was also highly original. A major theoretical contribution is "Self-Preservation and the Death Instinct," published in 1944. Another significant contribution to theory was Simmel's hypothesis concerning the existence of pre-oedipal anal libido, germane to certain psychosomatic and psychotic disorders. These ideas would find resonance in the work of Melanie Klein, Wilfred Bion, and Donald Meltzer.
Simmel also published some thirty original works on social issues, clinical problems, and matters of mental health policy. He is important both as a founder of the institutions noted above and for establishing a place for psychoanalysis in health care and suggesting its applications to clinical medicine. Many of his works concern psychosomatic medicine, including his "Über die Psychogenese von Organstörungen und ihre psychoanalytische Behandlung" (The Psychogenesis of Organic Disturbances and Their Psychoanalytic treatment") from 1931. He edited the anthology Anti-Semitism. A Social Disease, published in 1946. Psychoanalyse und ihre Anwendungen [Psychoanalysis and its applications.
FROM THE LETTER OF ERNST SIMMEL TO GEORG GRODDEK,
22 FEBRUARY 1934
MY DEPARTURE FROM EUROPE IS LIKE QUICKLY REMOVING FIRST AID TAPE – IT LEAVES ME SORE AND WHENEVER YOU THINK IT HAS COME LOOSE IT IS STILL STUCK IN ANOTHER SPOT. ONE MUST ALWAYS PAINFULLY TEAR OFF A NEW PIECE AND SUCH A PAINFUL SPOT YOU ARE FOR ME.
Application of Psychoanalysis to Criminology, scientific works of Dr. Simmel
Areas of scientific interests and works of Dr. Simmel
Biological terms, transmutation of external mobility of the organism in internal mobility of organs
Dr. Ernest Simmel, co-founder of the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute, 1920s
Dr. Ernest Simmel, German period, Rostock, Berlin, scientific work, discourse
Dr. Ernest Simmel, medical military service in the First World War, hospital for neuroses
Dr. Ernest Simmel, member of the Berlin Psychoanalytic Society
Dr. Ernest Simmel, poor health and illness since 1943
Dr. Ernest Simmel, Sanitarium Schloss Tegel, Berlin, 1920s, 1931, discourse
Dr. Ernest Simmel, scholar, President of Psychoanalytic Study Group, 1935 -- 1943
Dr. Ernest Simmel, studies, research, publication in Psychoanalysis, Germany, 1900 - 1934
Dr. Ernest Simmel, studies and professional work in Psychoanalysis, Berlin, 1908 - 1934
Dr.Freud, The Ways of Psychoanalytic Therapy, the Budapest Congress, 1918, Dr. Simmel, guidelines
Dr. Simmel, establishing methods in training, the supervised anaslysis and case seminars
Dr. Simmel, establishing the first curriculum for training in psychoanalysis, 1920s, Germany
Dr. Simmel, Freudian ideology of Psychoanalysis
Dr. Simmel, Freudian Psychoanalysis, principles, conceptions and content
Dr. Simmel, inspirer and the organizer of the Institute
Dr. Simmel, integrity of character, fearless, wit were his intrinsic qualities
Dr. Simmel, Men are being prompted by unconscious impulses or inhibitions, Psychoanalysis, theory
Dr. Simmel, perception and vision of the Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis
Dr. Simmel, program articles, lectures, papers and presentations, Psychoanalysis
Dr. Simmel, Psychoanalytic Treatment in Hospital, discourse of Schloss-Tegel, publication 1928, 1929
Dr. Simmel, publications, appeared in German and international scholarly journals, 1908 - 1934
Dr. Simmel, The Interrelationship of War Neuroses and Mental Trauma, 1918, won Freud Prize, 1918
Dr. Simmel, the organizer of the Los Angeles Psychoanalytic Society
Dr. Simmel, unattained dream of the full-scale Psychoanalytic Institute and Sanitarium in Los Angele
Dr. Simmel founded the Psychoanalytic Sanitarium at Schloss-Tegel, near Berlin in 1927, Director
Dr. Simmel induced the organization of the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Society, 1940s
Dr. Simmel invited Frances Deri and Otto Fenichel, psychoanalysts from Europe
Dr. Simmel transformed Psychoanalytic Study Group into a formal organization in the summer of 1935
Dysfunction of the organ represents an irrational actions of the same organ within the organism
Five stages of a personal narrative in terms of mental discourse, Dr. Simmel
Frances Deri, Paper in Memoriam of Ernest Simmel, read on December 13, 1947, memorial meeting
Freud's formula, neurosis represents a reaction upon the pressure of civilization
Freud's formula, the hysteric person changes a private part of himself instead of his milieu
Inhibition of thoughts and actions -- reaction of an individual upon his milieu, Dr. Simmel
Institutional psychoanalytic treatment, scientific works of Dr. Simmel
Life circles in psychoanalytic terms by Dr. Simmel
Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis, applied psychoanalysis, Dr. Simmel
Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis, Free Clinic, Dr. Simmel
Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis, Research Division, Dr. Simmel
Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis, training facilities, Dr. Simmel
Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis commence work in 1946, Dr. Simmel
Mental illness and physical illness may interchange and interplay which each other, Dr. Simmel
Prospective structure of the Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis, 1939, 1940, Dr. Simmel
Psycho-somatic medicine, scientific works of Dr. Simmel
Psychoanalysis, discourse and conceptions
Psychoanalysis defined correlations between organic diseases and mental diseases, Dr. Simmel
Psychogenesis for organic diseases, scientific works of Dr. Simmel
School for Nursery Years, endorsed by Dr. Simmel, 1940
Scientific biography of Dr. Ernest Simmel, 1900 - 1947
Sigmund Freud, Theory of Psychoanalysis
Some repressed ideas have grown unconscious may manifest themselves of physical functions
Substantiations and prospective for the Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis works of Dr. Simmel
The fifth life circle is love and matrimony, Dr. Simmel
The first life circle is the family, Dr. Simmel
The fourth life circle is social and societal, Dr. Simmel
The function of super-ego is a reflection of the childhood experience, Dr. Simmel
The key to mastering ones own life is to know the unconscious, Freud, by Dr. Simmel
The Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalysis, effort to organize and function, all by Dr. Simmel
Theory of Psychoanalysis, narratives
Therapy for Psychoses, scientific works of Dr. Simmel
The second life circle is school, Dr. Simmel
The sense of Freud's formula, neuroses represents a reaction upon the pressure of civilization
The third life circle is profession, business or trade, Dr. Simmel
The unconscious determines life conflict, Psychoanalysis, theory
Transmutation of the external mobility of the joint organism into the internal mobility of organs
War-Neuroses, scientific works of Dr. Simmel
Access Restrictions: For research and teaching
Use Restrictions: Credit and references to the New Center of Psychoanalysis of Los Angeles is required
Acquisition Source: Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles, Dr. Ernst Simmel personal papers
Acquisition Method: Archival holdings of the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles, Psychoanalytic Society and Institute of Los Angeles. Dr. Ernst Simmel personal papers
Related Materials:
RG -- 01, Psychoanalytic Institute Foundation of Los Angles, 1938 --1940
RG -- 06, Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles, 1935 -- 1946, Papers RG -- 18, Correspondences from Dr. Freud to Dr. Simmel, 1918 -- 1939 RG -- 24, Selected Correspondences between the Freudian Circle of Psychoanalysts, 1918 -- 1950s
Preferred Citation: Archive of the New Center for Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles
Other Note:
SIMMEL, ERNST (1882-1947)
Neurologist and psychoanalyst Ernst Simmel was born on April 4, 1882, in Breslau, Germany (now Wroclaw, Poland) and died in Los Angeles on November 11, 1947.
From a Jewish background, Simmel was the youngest of nine children. His father, Siegfried, was a banker; his mother, Johanna, managed an employment agency for domestic servants.
After studying medicine and psychiatry in Berlin and Rostock, Simmel received his medical degree in 1908; his dissertation concerned the psychogenic etiology of dementia praecox. Early in his career he worked as a general practitioner in Berlin. During World War I, however, he served as military doctor and chief of a hospital for psychiatric battle casualties in Posen. There he introduced the use of psychodynamic principles; at the time, he was still self-taught in psychoanalysis.
Returning to Berlin after the war, Simmel underwent a didactic analysis with Karl Abraham in 1919. Together with Abraham and Max Eitington, he helped establish the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute in 1920. He served as president of the Berlin Psychoanalytic Society from 1926 to 1930, and founded and served as chief physician of the Tegel sanitarium Schloss Tegel, outside Berlin, in 1927. The sanatorium, the first ever designed to employ psychoanalytic principles in treating patients who might benefit from observation, went bankrupt and closed in 1931.
In 1910, Simmel married Alice Seckelson, and the couple would have two sons. In 1929 he married his second wife, Hertha Brüggemann.
Simmel, a liberal who had helped to found the Society of Socialist Physicians and served as its president from 1924 to 1933, ran afoul of Nazi authorities soon after Hitler came to power in 1933. Emigrating to the United States in 1934, he moved to Los Angeles after a brief period at the Topeka Psychoanalytic Institute. He was instrumental in founding the Los Angeles Psychoanalytic Institute soon after the Second World War; he also helped establish the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Society, and served as its first president.
Simmel published both clinical and theoretical papers. On the Psychoanalysis of War Neuroses (1921) became a classic. His 1927 lecture at the Innsbruck Congress on the use of psychoanalytic principles in treating institutionalized patients was also highly original. A major theoretical contribution is "Self-Preservation and the Death Instinct," published in 1944. Another significant contribution to theory was Simmel's hypothesis concerning the existence of pre-oedipal anal libido, germane to certain psychosomatic and psychotic disorders. These ideas would find resonance in the work of Melanie Klein, Wilfred Bion, and Donald Meltzer.
Simmel also published some thirty original works on social issues, clinical problems, and matters of mental health policy. He is important both as a founder of the institutions noted above and for establishing a place for psychoanalysis in health care and suggesting its applications to clinical medicine. Many of his works concern psychosomatic medicine, including his "Über die Psychogenese von Organstörungen und ihre psychoanalytische Behandlung" (The Psychogenesis of Organic Disturbances and Their Psychoanalytic treatment") from 1931. He edited the anthology Anti-Semitism. A Social Disease, published in 1946. Psychoanalyse und ihre Anwendungen [Psychoanalysis and its applications], a collection of numerous abstracts, lectures, and unpublished manuscripts, appeared in 1993.
Overall these Papers could be categorized in to the following groups,
- Scientific works such as monographs, essays, articles and notes;
- Unpublished manuscripts, prepared in Los Angeles, some of them did not see publications;
- Official correspondences of behalf of the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles;
- Narratives related to scientific, business and council meeting of the Psychoanalytic Study Group of Los Angeles;
- Preparatory substantiations for the establishment of Psychoanalytic Institute and Psychoanalytic Foundation in Los Angeles;
- Personal correspondences with colleagues and scholars, largely related to the Science of Psychoanalysis;
- Public lectures, presentation and speeches also related to the Science of Psychoanalysis
- Drafts of articles, essays and monographs and editorial work on them
It is estimated that the number of Dr. Simmel's various Papers being archived at the New Center for Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles amounted to 8000 pages of documents.