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The Sigmund Freud Archives mainly consist of a trove of documents housed at the US Library of Congress<ref>Sigmund Freud Collection in the Library of Congress</ref><ref name="Kurt Eissler">Kurt Eissler, 90, Director of Sigmund Freud Archives by Sarah Boxer, The New York Times, February 20, 1999.</ref> and in the former residence of Sigmund Freud during the last year of his life, at 20 Maresfield Gardens in northwest London. The archive comprises Freud's tapes, letters and papers.<ref name="Kurt Eissler" /> It was founded in 1951 by Kurt R. Eissler among others, and received contributions from Anna Freud.<ref name="Kurt Eissler" />

It was at the center of a complicated scandal, described by Janet Malcolm in her book In the Freud Archives and by Jeffrey Masson in his book Final Analysis.

HistoryEdit

Early historyEdit

The Archives were founded by Kurt R. Eissler in 1951, together with a group of people who knew Freud personally, including Heinz Hartmann, Ernst Kris, Bertram Lewin and Hermann Nunberg.<ref name="Kurt Eissler" /> It was directed by Eissler for decades after its founding. Eissler prevented many well-meaning scholars from seeing many Freud documents, claiming confidentiality, even when their donors had not requested nor demanded confidentiality and even when no potential victims of the revelation of those documents existed.Template:Sfn By the 1980s, Eissler, with the help of Anna Freud, had expanded the collection to include thousands of items.<ref name="Kurt Eissler" />

Masson controversyEdit

Template:Further information Eissler was introduced to Masson in 1974.<ref name="Kurt Eissler" /> Masson was appointed secretary, and Eissler intended for Masson to succeed him as director,<ref name="Kurt Eissler" /> which he did in 1980. Being an officer of the Archives, Masson had administrative access to all its documents, and he was therefore allowed to see anything he wanted breaking the seal whenever necessary.Template:Citation needed

In 1981, Masson published a paper wherein he claimed that Freud's abandonment of his seduction theory had taken place for reasons not related to the scientific merit of the theory,<ref name="Kurt Eissler" /> namely that Freud believed that granting the truth of his female patients' claims that they had been sexually abused would risk the reputation of the emerging psychoanalytic method.<ref>Assault on Truth</ref>Template:Page needed Masson said that "Freud began a trend away from the real world that, it seems to me, has come to a dead halt in the present-day sterility of psychoanalysis throughout the world."<ref name="Kurt Eissler" />

Eissler was deeply shocked ("Just today Masud Khan called me from London and asked me to dismiss you from the Archives. The board members, all of them, or at least most of them, are asking for the same."<ref>Eissler to Masson, p. 194 of Final Analysis</ref>), and Masson was subsequently dismissed from his job at the Archives, whereupon followed three lawsuits and a well-publicized scandal.<ref name="Kurt Eissler" /><ref>"Freud Archives Research Chief Removed in Dispute Over Yale Talk" by Ralph Blumenthal, The New York Times November 9, 1981</ref>

Recent historyEdit

Harold P. Blum succeeded Masson and Eissler as Executive Director. He was succeeded by Louis Rose, who is the current director Template:As of.<ref>Photo</ref><ref name="Sigmund Freud Archives">Sigmund Freud Archives</ref> The other current officers are Jennifer Stuart as President, Nellie L. Thompson as Secretary, and W. Craig Tomlinson as Treasurer.<ref name="Sigmund Freud Archives" />

LiteratureEdit

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See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

Research

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