Bringing Freud to America

Edmonds Bringing Freud to America - coverIn 1900, hardly anyone in America had heard of Sigmund Freud, but by 1920 nearly everyone had. How did that happen?

This is the story of the translators, editors, journalists, publishers, promoters and booksellers who first brought Freud to American readers.

They included scientists and scoundrels, reckless risk-takers and buttoned-down businessmen, puritans and libertines, anarchists and capitalists, passionate freedom fighters and racist bigots. “American publishers,” Freud wrote to one colleague, “are a dangerous breed.” Elsewhere he called them rascals, liars, swindlers, crooks, and pirates.

Here are accounts of their drunken parties, political crusades, questionable business practices, criminal prosecutions, shameless marketing, and blatant plagiarism. There’s even a suicide and a murder. And lots of sex (it’s a book about Freud, after all).

Ideas that Freud promoted are woven so tightly into our daily lives today that, like gravity or air, we hardly notice them. This book, based on hundreds of unpublished records, explains how they first took root in American minds more than a century ago.

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Checklist of American Editions of Freud’s Books

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