Box 1
Contains 17 Results:
William J. Gilmore, The Methodology of Psychohistory: An Annotated Bibliography
This series contains articles submitted to Psychohistory Review and not accepted for publication. Chronological/Alphabetical order is artificial. Topics include the history of Psychohistory, womens' histories, and psychobiographies of Marx and Hitler. Correspondence relating to the rejection of each paper is included. There are brief biographies of most of the authors.
Raimund E. Goerler, Family, Psychology, and History
This series contains articles submitted to Psychohistory Review and not accepted for publication. Chronological/Alphabetical order is artificial. Topics include the history of Psychohistory, womens' histories, and psychobiographies of Marx and Hitler. Correspondence relating to the rejection of each paper is included. There are brief biographies of most of the authors.
Barbara Kellerman, On Methodological Strategies of Political Biography: A Precis
This series contains articles submitted to Psychohistory Review and not accepted for publication. Chronological/Alphabetical order is artificial. Topics include the history of Psychohistory, womens' histories, and psychobiographies of Marx and Hitler. Correspondence relating to the rejection of each paper is included. There are brief biographies of most of the authors.
George Kren, The Psychodynamics of Nazism, 1919-1933
This series contains articles submitted to Psychohistory Review and not accepted for publication. Chronological/Alphabetical order is artificial. Topics include the history of Psychohistory, womens' histories, and psychobiographies of Marx and Hitler. Correspondence relating to the rejection of each paper is included. There are brief biographies of most of the authors.
Jacqueline S. Reinier, Attitudes Toward and Practices of Child Rearing
This series contains articles submitted to Psychohistory Review and not accepted for publication. Chronological/Alphabetical order is artificial. Topics include the history of Psychohistory, womens' histories, and psychobiographies of Marx and Hitler. Correspondence relating to the rejection of each paper is included. There are brief biographies of most of the authors.
Robert Robins, Hypersuspiciouness
This series contains articles submitted to Psychohistory Review and not accepted for publication. Chronological/Alphabetical order is artificial. Topics include the history of Psychohistory, womens' histories, and psychobiographies of Marx and Hitler. Correspondence relating to the rejection of each paper is included. There are brief biographies of most of the authors.
Carroll Smith Rosenberg, The New Woman and the Psychohistorian: A Modest Proposal
This series contains articles submitted to Psychohistory Review and not accepted for publication. Chronological/Alphabetical order is artificial. Topics include the history of Psychohistory, womens' histories, and psychobiographies of Marx and Hitler. Correspondence relating to the rejection of each paper is included. There are brief biographies of most of the authors.
Rough Drafts
This series contains articles submitted to Psychohistory Review and not accepted for publication. Chronological/Alphabetical order is artificial. Topics include the history of Psychohistory, womens' histories, and psychobiographies of Marx and Hitler. Correspondence relating to the rejection of each paper is included. There are brief biographies of most of the authors.
J. Lee Schneidman and Conalee Levine-Schneidman
This series contains articles submitted to Psychohistory Review and not accepted for publication. Chronological/Alphabetical order is artificial. Topics include the history of Psychohistory, womens' histories, and psychobiographies of Marx and Hitler. Correspondence relating to the rejection of each paper is included. There are brief biographies of most of the authors.
The Story of Adam and Eve
This series contains articles submitted to Psychohistory Review and not accepted for publication. Chronological/Alphabetical order is artificial. Topics include the history of Psychohistory, womens' histories, and psychobiographies of Marx and Hitler. Correspondence relating to the rejection of each paper is included. There are brief biographies of most of the authors.