Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Princess Marie Bonaparte was a colorful yet mysterious member of Freud's inner circle of psychoanalysis. In analysis with Freud beginning in 1925 (she was then 45 years old), she became a lay analyst and writer of many papers and books. Her most ambitious task was a 700-page psychobiography of Edgar Allan Poe that was first published in French ...

  2. La princesa Marie Bonaparte, presa de un intenso enamoramiento, agasajó al doctor Freud con suntuosos regalos. Jarrones griegos, finísimos puros traídos de diversas legiones del mundo, chocolates suizos, pañuelos de seda. Freud disfrutó locamente su condición de criatura mimada. Pero la aparición de Bonaparte también traería de vuelta ...

  3. 28 de oct. de 2021 · Marie Bonaparte is what I like to call a fascinating woman, the kind of woman who spends her life being unconventional, pioneering, wildly interesting and getting away with it all by being very rich. Her life story is outrageous, shocking, and almost too on the nose metaphorically: she’s the descendant of the man who swept away the Ancien Regime, and used her inheritance to drag Europe into ...

  4. Prințesa Marie Bonaparte (n. 2 iulie 1882, Saint-Cloud, Île-de-France, Franța – d. 21 septembrie 1962, Gassin, Provence-Côte d'Azur-Corse ⁠ (d), Franța) a fost autor și psihanalist francez, foarte apropiată de Sigmund Freud. Averea ei a contribuit la popularitatea psihanalizei și a permis evadarea lui Freud din Germania nazistă .

  5. Lo cierto es que Marie Bonaparte (1882-1962), sobrina nieta de Napoleón l, emperador de Francia, y tía política del actual príncipe Felipe de Edimburgo, no pasó desapercibida en la historia del siglo XX. Era una princesa interesada en el orgasmo femenino y fue una apasionada del psicoanálisis, convirtiéndose en alumna, amiga y hasta ...

  6. Bonaparte, Marie 1882–1962. Great-grandniece of Napoleon Bonaparte, Princess Marie Bonaparte was a writer, psychoanalyst, and devotee of Sigmund Freud.Not a medical doctor, Bonaparte worked in France to help establish groups, including the Société Psychoanalytique de Paris (SPP), for non-medical psychotherapies.