Róheim, Géza, 1891-1953
Name Entries
person
Róheim, Géza, 1891-1953
Name Components
Name :
Róheim, Géza, 1891-1953
Roheim, Géza, 1891-1953
Name Components
Name :
Roheim, Géza, 1891-1953
Roheim, Geza, 1891-1953
Name Components
Name :
Roheim, Geza, 1891-1953
Róheim, Géza, 1891-1953.
Name Components
Name :
Róheim, Géza, 1891-1953.
Genders
Exist Dates
Biographical History
Hungarian anthropologist, a pioneer in applying psychoanalytic techniques to the study of cultures. His "ontogenetic theory of culture" is considered a major contribution. Born in Budapest in 1891, educated in Hungary and Germany. Studied psychoanalytic theory under Sandor Ferendzi. Served as the first professor of anthropology at the Univ. of Budapest, 1919-1938. Conducted field work in Australia, Melanesia, and Arizona from 1929 to 1931. Emigrated to the United States in 1938 and opened a private practice in New York City, where he lived until his death in 1953.
Biography
Géza Róheim considered himself a professional anthropologist, although many see his work as an example of the Freudian school of psychoanalytic theory. He is credited as one of the first to apply psychoanalysis to the study of world cultures.
The scion of an affluent Hungarian family, Róheim was born in Budapest in 1891. He took an early interest in literature and history, later receiving formal training in geography and anthropology. In addition, he studied psychoanalytic theory under Sandor Ferenczi, one of the pioneers in the field. Travelling to Germany prior to World War I, Róheim pursued his professional education in anthropology at the universities of Leipzig and Berlin. Also in Germany, he came under the influence of the theories of Sigmund Freud. Róheim returned to Hungary and, in 1919, became the first professor of anthropology at the University of Budapest, a post he held until 1938.
Throughout the 1920s Róheim remained primarily an academic anthropologist. However, in 1929, he embarked on a lengthy field expedition that would last until 1931. Financed by Marie Bonaparte (Princess George of Greece), the field trip was originally designed to apply psychoanalytic theory to the aborigines of Central Australia. Róheim expanded the original plan to include journeys to the Melanesian island of Normanby, plus short trips to Somaliland and Arizona. In his field work, Róheim focused primarily on the individual member of a community or culture. He used many techniques that were not common in contemporary anthropology, including dream analysis and the analysis of children's play activities.
In 1938 Róheim escaped the political turmoil in Europe and emigrated to the United States. He worked briefly, during 1938, as a clinician at the Worcester State Hospital in Massachusetts. He then moved to New York City, where he entered private practice and continued his writing. In 1940 he lectured at the New York Psychoanalytic Institute. Although he took short field trips to study the Navaho Indians in the southwestern U.S., Róheim remained in New York City until his death in 1953.
Róheim was primarily a theoretician, although his theory was always based on rigorous observation and study. He was one of the first anthropologists to successfully apply Freudian theories to the analysis of cultures. His "ontogenetic theory of culture" is considered a major contribution to his field. In this theory, Róheim contended that cultural differences were largely the result of an individual's childhood traumas. The childhood experiences of the individual, he thought, were ultimately reflected in adult personality and in the collective institutions of a given culture.
Róheim stated his theory most clearly in his work The Origin and Function of Culture, published in 1943. Among his other works, the most notable are Australian Totenism (1925), Animism, Magic, and the Divine King (1930), The Eternal Ones of the Dream (1945), Psychoanalysis and Anthropology (1950), and The Gates of Dream (1952).
After Róheim's death, many of his works were collected and published by anthropologist Werner Muensterberger. Muensterberger's editions include Magic and Schizophrenia (1955), The Panic of the Gods and Other Essays (1972) and Children of the Desert : The Western Tribes of Central Australia (1974).
[Sources: Paul A. Robinson, The Freudian Left : Wilhelm Reich, Géza Róheim, Herbert Marcuse (New York: Harper and Row, c1969); George B. Wilbur and Warner Muensterberger, eds., Psychoanalysis and Culture : Essays in Honor of Géza Róheim (New York: International Universities Press, c1951).]
eng
Latn
External Related CPF
Other Entity IDs (Same As)
Sources
Loading ...
Resource Relations
Loading ...
Internal CPF Relations
Loading ...
Languages Used
Subjects
Aboriginal Australians
Aboriginal Australians
Aboriginal Australians
Aboriginal Australians
Animals
Aranda (Australian people)
Arrernte / Aranda language
Arrernte / Aranda people
Arrernte (Australian people)
Cannibalism
Dreams
Dreams
Dreams
Ethnology
Ethnology
Ethnology
Ethnopsychology
Folklore
Food
Gender relations
Hunting
Hunting
Language
Luritja / Loritja people (C7.1) (NT SG52-04)
Mythology
Navajo Indians
Navajo Indians
Pintupi people (C10) (NT SF52-11)
Primitive societies
Psychoanalysis and culture
Psychoanalysis and culture
Religion and culture
Sex relations
Stories and motifs
Stories and motifs
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Oceania
AssociatedPlace
Normanby Island (Papua New Guinea)
AssociatedPlace
Normanby Island (Papua New Guinea)
AssociatedPlace
Oceania
AssociatedPlace
Papua New Guinea--Normanby
AssociatedPlace
Papua New Guinea--Normanby Island
AssociatedPlace
Oceania
AssociatedPlace