| Charles Bernheimer - 1990 - 368 頁
...woman and above all a foolish one, who had concentrated all her interests upon domestic affairs. . . . She had no understanding of her children's more active...and was occupied all day long in cleaning the house and its furniture and in keeping them clean — to such an extent as to make it almost impossible to... | |
| Andrew H. Miller - 1995 - 260 頁
...Freud called "housewife's psychosis." Speaking briefly about (his) Dora's mother, Freud writes that she "was occupied all day long in cleaning the house with...keeping them clean - to such an extent as to make it almost impossible to use or enjoy them."4 When, after attending to the arrangement of his children's... | |
| Brett Silverstein, Deborah Perlick - 1995 - 224 頁
...picture, in fact, of what might be called the "housewife's psychosis." She had no understanding for her children's more active interests, and was occupied all day long in cleaning the house. As a result, Dora "looked down on her mother" and modeled herself on a maiden aunt who mysteriously... | |
| Peter Loewenberg - 1996 - 334 頁
...(New York, 1976). PP 247-310. mother had what Freud termed a "housewife's psychosis." Freud felt that she had no understanding of her children's more active...keeping them clean — to such an extent as to make it almost impossible to use or enjoy them. In adulthood "Dora" complained of "her unhappy childhood... | |
| Patricia Fallon, Melanie A. Katzman, Susan C. Wooley - 1996 - 502 頁
...picture, in fact, of what might be called the "housewife's psychosis." She had no understanding for her children's more active interests, and was occupied all day long in cleaning the house, (p. 34) As a result, Dora was on "very bad terms with" and "looked down on her mother" (Freud, 1905/1963,... | |
| Lucille P. Fultz - 2003 - 172 頁
...example, one that, in some respects, describes Geraldine, Pauline, and Helene Wright. Dora's mother "had no understanding of her children's more active...long in cleaning the house with its furniture and in utensils and in keeping them clean — to such an extent as to make it impossible to use or en(oy... | |
| Catherine M. Peebles - 2004 - 252 頁
...estrangement to which it led. She presented the picture, in fact. of what we might call "housewife psychosis." She had no understanding of her children's...occupied all day long in cleaning the house with its furuiture and utensils and in keeping them clean— to such an extent as to make it almost impossible... | |
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