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  1. The Atlantic covers news, politics, culture, technology, health, and more, through its articles, podcasts, videos, and flagship magazine.

  2. in Nutley, New Jersey, The United States. June 04, 1892. Died. April 28, 1973. Genre. Psychology. edit data. Alix Strachey was a psychoanalyst, and a member of the Bloomsbury Group. She was the sister of economist Philip Sargant Florence, and with her husband James Strachey was among the translators of what became the "Standard Edition" of the ...

  3. 12 de jun. de 2017 · Furthermore, Alix Strachey’s representation of the city adds a new facet that contradicts in some respects the widespread dislike of Berlin as expressed by other members of the Bloomsbury group, most notably Vanessa Bell and Virginia Woolf, whose notoriously disastrous stay there in the late 1920s is better known than Alix Strachey’s.

  4. Alix Strachey (née Sargant-Florence) Sitter in 32 portraits. Artist associated with 10 portraits. Born in New Jersey to the British painter Mary Florence and an American father, Alix Strachey became a principle figure of psychoanalysis and translator of Sigmund Freud's works. After studying modern languages at Newham College at the University ...

  5. Reviews the book "Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety" by S. Freud (Translated by Alix Strachey) (1936) and "The Problem of Anxiety" by S. Freud (Translated by Henry Alden Bunker) (1936). Comparison of the two indicates little difference in general clarity of presentation and no disagreement on important words although the Strachey text reads a little more smoothly and appears to be a somewhat ...

  6. orlando.cambridge.org › people › 6d811565-c30f-4f9eAlix Strachey | Orlando

    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. Family and Intimate relationships

  7. 20 de out. de 2023 · The project website happy-in-berlin.org documents how writers ranging from Christopher Isherwood to the less well-known Alix Strachey experienced Berlin, which places were important to them, and what they wrote about their time in Berlin. The five-part podcast series which accompanied the project is available here.