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Ida Bauer (1882–1945) was an Austrian patient of Sigmund Freud whom he diagnosed with hysteria. He wrote a famous case study about her using the pseudonym 'Dora'. This study is published in "Fragments of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria" (1905 [1901], Standard Edition Vol.7, pp1–122). Bauer's most manifest hysterical symptom was aphonia (loss of voice). Ida's brother Otto Bauer was a leading member of the Austromarxism movement.
[edit] Case History[edit] DreamsIda recounted two dreams to Freud. In the first:
The second dream is substantially longer:
Freud reads both dreams as referring to Ida Bauer's sexual life, which becomes progressively more complicated as his analysis progresses. Ida regularly babysat the children of a married couple known only as Herr and Frau K. Ida's father was the lover of Frau K, and (according to Ida, and believed by Freud), Herr K himself had repeatedly propositioned Ida, as early as when she was 14 years old. (Freud, "Fragment of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria ('Dora')") Ultimately, Freud sees Ida as repressing a desire for her father, a desire for Herr K, and a desire for Frau K as well. After only 11 weeks of therapy she broke off her therapy, much to Freud's disappointment. Freud saw this as his failure as an analyst and decided the whole treatment had failed. After some time, however, Ida returned to see Freud and explained how her symptoms had mostly cleared. Freud had been the only person to believe her regarding 'Herr K' and her father. After the analysis, she chose to confront her tormentors (her father, his lover and his lover's husband). When confronted, they confessed that she had been right all along and following this, most of her symptoms had cleared. [edit] Freud's interpretationThrough the analysis, Freud interprets Ida's hysteria as a manifestation of her jealousy toward the relationship between Frau K and her father, combined with the mixed feelings of Herr K's sexual approach to her.[3] Although Freud was disappointed with the initial results of the case, he considered it important, as it raised his awareness of the phenomenon of transference, on which he blamed his seeming failures in the case. Freud gave her the name 'Dora', and he describes in detail in The Psychopathology of Everyday Life what his unconscious motivations for choosing such a name might have been. His sister's nursemaid had had to give up her real name, Rosa, when she accepted the job because Freud's sister was also named Rosa—she took the name 'Dora' instead. Thus, when Freud needed a name for someone who could not keep her real name (this time, in order to preserve his patient's anonymity), Dora was the name that occurred to him.[4] [edit] Criticisms of interpretation'Dora' remains one of Freud's most famous cases, and is often discussed in feminist circles. Freud's comments about the case, such as "This was surely just the situation to call up distinct feelings of sexual excitement in a girl of fourteen", in reference to Dora being kissed by a "young man of prepossessing appearance"[5], are seen to imply a fundamental passivity in female sexuality. [edit] Literature
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