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Archival description
Émigrés membership

Letters from the following individuals (previously members of other European societies) accepting membership of the Society/Institute and stating their qualifications: Edward Bibring, Margarethe Bibring, Dorothy Burlingham, Ludwig Eidelberg, Kate Friedlander, Anna Freud, Sigmund Freud (also accepting the title of Honorary Consultant Physician to the Clinic), Hedwig Hoffer, Wilhelm Hoffer, Otto Isakower, Salomea Isakower, Ernst Kris, Marianne Kris, Barbara Lantos, Max Schur, Erwin Stengel and H A Thorner.

See S-M-04 for papers concerning the emigration and resettlement of European psychoanalysts.

Emil Oberholzer
GB BPASA P04-C-D-6 · File · 1920-1936; 1920-1922; 1936
Part of Ernest Jones collection

The correspondence is chiefly regarding the administration, procedures and membership of the Swiss Psychoanalytical Society and the acquisition of psychoanalytic texts for the society via Jones.

Emmy Gut
GB BPASA P41-C-13 · Item · 1985-1994
Part of Ilse Hellman collection

Productive and Unproductive Depression: Interference in the Adaptive Function of the Basic Depressed Response; The Function of Grief in Old Age.

Empathy
GB BPASA P40-F-1 · Item · 1959-1989
Part of Margaret Little collection

This is a file of notes, cuttings and correpondence collected together by Margaret Little. The file also includes a typescript paper by Hugo Lerner and Carlos Nemirovsky entitled 'Empathy in Psychoanalyzing', [late 1980s?].

Empty Folders
GB BPASA P07-A-49 · File · 1948-c.1962; dates of original papers; two items undated
Part of Tom Main collection

Several empty folders with the titles of additional papers written on the covers and, in most cases, a slip of paper inside with brief publication details of the paper.

GB BPASA P16-A-B-12 · File · c.1962-c.1967
Part of William Gillespie collection

Two typescripts. The earlier article is written for an unidentified publication and is accompanied by additional notes. The later article is a contribution to the 'Encyclopaedia Britannica' and is accompanied by an extract from the encyclopaedia which includes Gillespie's article, 'Later developments'.