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Psychiatry and psychoanalysis, perhaps more than other branches of medicine, have always made their own history a focus of their research. Among the reasons for this, two stand out. First, as new insights into the mind are gained through clinical experience, they are layered with preceding ones, like the layered and multifaceted psyche itself. Second, the exercise of historical investigation parallels the process of uncovering and reconstructing in the clinical situation proper. These efforts are aimed at recapturing something of the immediacy of past experience, allowing the reader or participant to enter into and make sense of that world. Naturally,
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