Abstract
The paper, highlighting the aspect of Sigmund Freud's presymbolic and early symbolic development, traces how the “Ursprache” and “Ur Kultur” of Příbor pressed behind other symbolic codes throughout his life's work. Weaving together multiple meanings of the words of Freud's original writings, the paper explores how his early access to a variety of symbolic codes, initially facilitated by his Příbor nanny, who spoke and sang to him in Czech and exposed him to liturgical Latin, in addition to his family's Yiddish and German, contributed to Freud's founding of psychoanalytic theory and clinical practice.
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Notes on contributors
Eva D. Papiasvili
Eva D. Papiasvili is senior clinical faculty and supervisor on the Doctoral program in clinical psychology, Columbia University in New York, a training and supervising analyst, and former executive director of the Institute of the Postgraduate Psychoanalytic Society. She is a member of the American Psychoanalytic Association and a honorary member of the Czech Psychoanalytic Society.