Disciplines
Clinical Medicine (5%); Arts (30%); Media and Communication Sciences (40%); Psychology (25%)
Keywords
Psychoanalysis,
Psychiatry,
Art History,
Communication Science
Abstract
This publication, which includes contributions from German, French and American academics, pays tribute to the
multi faceted researcher Ernst Kris (1900 Vienna -1957 New York) from the perspective of different disciplines. In
fact one needs three job descriptions to chart his output: art historian, psychoanalyst and communication scientist.
At 22, Kris had concluded his art history studies at Vienna University with a doctoral thesis on the technique of
casting from life in the late Renaissance, and had worked as a curator at the Kunsthistorisches Museum. By the
middle of the 1920s he had already met Sigmund Freud and started an analysis - which made him slowly turn away
from classical art history. In this period he developed his most interesting and fruitful texts, which founded his
reputation as an art psychologist: his studies on the early classicist sculptor Franz Xaver Messerschmidt (1932/33),
the text "On the psychology of caricature" (1934) and the small book he co-authored with Otto Kurz: "The Legend
of the Artist" (1934).
In 1938, immediately after the "Anschluss", Kris followed Freud into exile in London, and in 1940 he moved with
his family to New York. Here he initially devoted himself primarily to questions of communication science, setting
up working groups to analyse the propaganda of the Axis alliance with astonishing speed. Later he taught at the
New York Psychoanalytic Society and Institute, concentrating on child psychology. He set up research units at the
Yale Child Study Center and from 1945 he edited the newly founded journal "The Psychoanalytic Study of the
Child". He died in New York, highly respected as an important advocate of Ego-Psychology. Thus Kris developed,
partly through choice and partly by force of circumstance, a multi-disciplinary approach which is more in demand
than ever today: due to the broadening of art history into a science of images, the questions that a psychologically
aware communication science is confronted with today, and the recent understanding of psychoanalysis as a form
of cultural investigation.
Bearing this view of Kris in mind, the contributions to this publication review his writing in a newly critical way,
place it in its historical context and highlight what it predicts. The publication opens up Kris` work, which is still,
unjustly, only known through some key terms in the disciplines he covers.