David C. Funder
Fifth Edition
The Personality Puzzle explores the past, present, and future of the discipline to show students why personality psychology matters.More
David C. Funder, Daniel J. Ozer
Fourth Edition
The Fourth Edition of Pieces of the Personality Puzzle features insightful readings in personality psychology from a wide range of voices, with nearly a third of the readings new to this edition.More
Rollo May
The popular psychoanalyst examines the continuing tension in our lives between the possibilities that freedom offers and the various limitations imposed upon us by our particular fate or destiny.More
Rollo May
Stressing the positive, creative aspects of power and innocence, Rollo May offers a way of thinking about the problems of contemporary society.More
Rollo May
Here Rollo May discusses our loss of our personal identity in the contemporary world, the sources of our anxiety, the scope of psychotherapy, and the ultimate paradox of freedom and responsibility.More
Rollo May
When this important work was originally published in 1950--the first book in this country on anxiety--it was hailed as a work ahead of its time.More
Otto Fenichel, Leo Rangell
A perennially best-selling and influential psychoanalytic work.More
Rollo May
Rollo May draws on the insights of Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Freud, and other great thinkers to offer a helpful roadmap of the ideas and techniques of existential psychotherapy.More
Rollo May
What if imagination and art are not, as many of us might think, the frosting on life, but the fountainhead of human experience? What if our logic and science derive from art forms, rather than the other way around?More
Karen Horney
In this work, Karen Horney explores the basic structure of neuroses in the context of their cultural assumptions.More
Karen Horney
As a psychoanalytic pioneer, Karen Horney questioned some of Freud's formulations of psychosexual development, particularly in relation to women.More
Erik H. Erikson
In this study of Mahatma Gandhi, psychoanalyst Erik H. Erikson explores how Gandhi succeeded in mobilizing the Indian people both spiritually and politically as he became the revolutionary innovator of militant non-violence and India became the motherland of large-scale civil disobedience.More
Karen Horney
Here Karen Horney develops a dynamic theory of neurosis centered on the basic conflict among attitudes of "moving forward" "moving against," and "moving away from" people.More
Christopher Lasch
When The Culture of Narcissism was first published, it was clear that Christopher Lasch had identified something important: what was happening to American society in the wake of the decline of the family over the last century.More
Karen Horney, Douglas H. Ingram
This book presents the lectures Karen Horney gave her class on psychoanalytic technique during the last year of her life.More