James Strachey

Standard Name: Strachey, James
Used Form: James Beaumont Strachey

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Family and Intimate relationships Dorothy Bussy
James Beaumont Strachey (1887-1967) was analysed by Freud (with his wife, Alix Sargant-Florence ), translated Freud's work into English for the Hogarth Press , and became a pyschoanalyst himself.
Friends, Associates Dora Carrington
DC formed a lively group (the Wild Group, as they were known at the Slade ) with women she remained in close contact with for many years, including Dorothy Brett (later the Honourable), Barbara Hiles
Friends, Associates Julia Strachey
Friends and neighbours here included James and Alix Strachey , Clive Bell , and Virginia and Leonard Woolf .
Strachey, Julia, and Frances Partridge. Julia: A Portrait of Julia Strachey. Little, Brown, 1983.
105
Frances Partridge writes that JS was generally judged by them to be a lively and...
Intertextuality and Influence H. D.
Though undoubtedly a tribute, this is also an answer or a re-shaping. It takes the form of an extra chapter for Freud 's An Autobiographical Study (which had first appeared in English in James Strachey
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Virginia Woolf
This work is not so much a diary as a working notebook: its seven sketches take events or issues from VW ' life as grist to (in Doris Lessing 's words) five-finger exercises for future...

Timeline

1901: Sigmund Freud, in Fragment of an Analysis...

Writing climate item

1901

Sigmund Freud , in Fragment of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria, studied and wrote about the case of a hysterical woman named Dora; he believed that hysteria was caused by the...

October-December 1922: Sigmund Freud's Beyond the Pleasure Principle...

Building item

October-December 1922

Sigmund Freud 's Beyond the Pleasure Principle and Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego were published in English translations by the International Psycho-Analytical Press .
Woolmer, J. Howard, and Mary E. Gaither. A Checklist of the Hogarth Press, 1917-1946. Woolmer/Brotherson, 1986.

Texts

No bibliographical results available.