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Cesare Musatti

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Cesare Musatti
Born21 September 1897
Dolo, Italy
Died21 March 1989(1989-03-21) (aged 91)
Milan, Italy
Citizenship Italy
Alma materUniversity of Padua
Scientific career
FieldsPsychoanalysis

Cesare Luigi Musatti (21 September 1897 - 21 March 1989) was an Italian philosopher and psychoanalyst. He was a leading figure for the first generation of Italian psychoanalysts. Musatti studied under Vittorio Benussi before becoming his assistant. Musatti edited the Italian edition of the works of Sigmund Freud.

Life

Musatti's mother was a non-practicing Neapolitan Catholic, while father was Elia Musatti, a Venetan Jew who had been elected as a socialist deputy to the Italian parliament where he became a friend of Giacomo Matteotti. Musatti was neither baptised nor circumcised. During the fascist persecutions after the passage of Italy's racial laws, he managed to obtain a false baptisimal certificate from the Carmelites at Santa Maria in Traspontina. Though unreligious, he had his own children baptised according to the rites of the Waldensian Evangelical Church.

Selected works

  • Trattato di psicoanalisi, Paolo Boringhieri, Torino

References

  1. David B. Baker (13 January 2012). The Oxford Handbook of the History of Psychology: Global Perspectives. Oxford University Press. p. 335. ISBN 978-0-19-971065-2.
  2. ^ International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis. Thomson Gale. 2006. pp. 1087–1088. ISBN 978-0-02-865924-4.
  3. Samuel Arbiser; Jorge Schneider (17 April 2018). On Freud's Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety. Taylor & Francis. p. 157. ISBN 978-0-429-91683-0.
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