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  1. Sergei Konstantinovitch Pankejeff (Russian: Серге́й Константи́нович Панке́ев; 24 December 1886 – 7 May 1979) was a Russian aristocrat from Odesa, Russian Empire.

  2. Oct 20, 2023 · The Wolf Man, aka Sergei Pankejeff, was a patient of Sigmund Freud; Freud has been criticized for his diagnosis and treatment of Pankejeff.

  3. Sergei Pankejeff (1886-1979), or the ‘Wolf Man’, as he came to be known, was one of Freud’s most famous patients. A Russian of noble birth, Pankejeff was 23 years old when he began his treatment with Freud in February 1910. He was in a state of complete mental collapse.

  4. www.psychologistworld.com › freud › wolf-man-case-freudWolf Man - Psychologist World

    Wolf Man was Freuds pseudonym for Dr. Sergeï Pankejeff, who was born in St Petersburg, Russia in 1886, the youngest of two siblings. His health had deteriorated after he had suffered from gonorrhea aged eighteen and he eventually felt unable to pass bowel movements without the assistance of an enema.

  5. It was the harrowing childhood nightmare of Sergei Pankejeff (1886-1979), who was one of Freud’s most famous patients. The dream is so famous that Pankejeff later became known as theWolf Man’.

  6. Jul 22, 2019 · The Wolf Man, whose actual name was Sergei Pankejeff, was an aristocratic Russian émigré who received his nickname because he had an intense phobia about wolves. In early life, he was...

  7. Dec 18, 2019 · A comparative reading of Freud’s canonical case study “From the History of an Infantile Neurosis” (1918) and the memoir written by the protagonist of that study, Sergei Pankejeff, known as the Wolf Man (1971a), centers on the complex matrix of meanings embodied in the act of lifting the veil.