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  1. Sabina Nikolayevna Spielrein [1] (Russian: Сабина Николаевна Шпильрейн, IPA: [sɐˈbʲinə nʲɪkɐˈlajɪvnə ʂpʲɪlʲˈrɛjn]; 7 November 25 October 1885 OS – 11 August 1942) was a Russian physician and one of the first female psychoanalysts.

  2. Aug 15, 2023 · Sabina Spielrein was one of the first female psychoanalysts and a fascination of doctor Carl Jung. Learn more about her life, legacy, and important contributions to psychology. Menu

  3. Sabina Spielrein, a pioneer in the early years of psychoanalysis who made significant contributions to the field, was the first person to propose the thesis about instinctual life, which Freud later adapted.

  4. Who was Sabina Spielrein? Her diaries and letters were unearthed in Geneva in the 1980s, but what we know comes largely from a book published in 1994 that brought her relationship with Carl Jung to the mainstream, since she was his first patient, diagnosed with hysteria when she was 19 years old.

  5. Sabina Spielrein (1885-1942) was a Russian-Jewish psychoanalyst and pediatrician, a pioneer active in the early stages of the development of the psychoanalytic movement, and has become a scholar of a worldwide repute with at least thirty-seven publications in German, French and Russian.

  6. Aug 21, 2020 · As Freud ( 1928) noted in his famous essay on Dostoyevsky, the sources of creativity remain obscure. Thus Sabina Nikolayevna Spielrein-Sheftel (1885–1942) was a gifted and original scholar, thinker, and doctor, as well as one of the first female psychoanalysts (Marchese, 2015 ).

  7. Dec 30, 2019 · Spielrein was a pioneer in several key ways: she was the first psychiatric patient to become a psychoanalyst herself and her 1911 dissertation, “On the Psychological Context of a Case of ...

  8. Jun 2, 2020 · The Essential Writings of Sabina Spielrein: Pioneer of Psychoanalysis, edited and translated by Ruth Cape and Raymond Burt, Routledge, Abingdon and New York, 2019, 178 pp. Book Reviews Published: 02 June 2020

  9. May 22, 2014 · Sabina Spielrein has mostly been known, if at all, as the patient with whom Carl Jung became romantically involved and who then turned to Freud for advice. While the boundary violation alarmed Freud and became the catalyst for his technical papers on transference, Spielrein’s own intellectual contributions have seldom been acknowledged.

  10. “Long stigmatized as Carl Jungs hysterical mistress, Sabina Spielrein (1885-1942) was in fact a key figure in the history of psychoanalytic thought. Born into a Russian Jewish family, she was institutionalized at nineteen in Zurich and became Jung’s patient.