Otto Gross (1877–1920) was an Austrian psychoanalyst. A maverick early disciple of Sigmund Freud, he later became an anarchist and joined the utopian Ascona community.
His father Hans Gross was a judge turned pioneering criminologist. Otto initially collaborated with him, and then turned against his determinist ideas on character.[1]
A champion of an early form of anti-psychiatry and sexual liberation, he also developed an anarchist form of depth psychology (which rejected the civilising necessity of psychological repression proposed by Freud). He adopted a modified form of the proto-feminist and neo-pagan theories of Johann Jakob Bachofen[2], with which he attempted to return civilization back to a postulated 'golden age' of non-hierarchy. He was subsequently ostracized, and was not included in histories of the psychoanalytic and psychiatric establishments. He died in poverty.
Greatly influenced by the philosophy of Max Stirner[3] and Friedrich Nietzsche and the political theories of Peter Kropotkin, he in turn influenced D. H. Lawrence (through Gross' affair with Frieda von Richthofen), Franz Kafka and other artists, including the founders of Berlin Dada. His influence on psychology was more limited. Carl Jung claimed his entire worldview changed when he attempted to analyse Gross and partially had the tables turned on him.[4] It appears likely that another maverick psychologist, Wilhelm Reich, many of whose ideas mirror Gross, owed some debt to him.
As a Bohemian drug user from early youth, he is sometimes credited as a founding grandfather of Counterculture.
Notes
- ^ Ronald Hayman, A Life of Jung (1999), p. 99.
- ^ Hayman, p. 101.
- ^ Bernd A. Laska: Otto Gross zwischen Max Stirner und Wilhelm Reich, Aus: Raimund Dehmlow & Gottfried Heuer, Hg.: 3. Internationaler Otto-Gross-Kongress, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, München. Marburg: LiteraturWissenschaft.de 2003, S. 125–162, ISBN 3-936134-06-5
- ^ Hayman, p. 102.
External links
- The Otto Gross Society is dedicated to preserving his work
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