Sergei Pankejeff


Sergei Konstantinovitch Pankejeff was a Russian aristocrat from Odesa in the Russian Empire. Pankejeff is best known for being a patient of Sigmund Freud, who gave him the pseudonym of the Wolf Man to protect his identity, after a dream Pankejeff had of a tree full of white wolves.

Biography

Early life and education

Pankejeff was born on the 24 December 1886 at his family's estate near Kakhovka on the river Dnieper. The Pankejeff family was a wealthy family in St. Petersburg.
His father was Konstantin Matviyovich Pankeyev and his mother was Anna Semenivna, née Shapovalova.
Pankejeff's parents were married young and had a happy marriage, but his mother became sickly and was therefore somewhat absent from the lives of her two children. Pankejeff would later describe her as cold and lacking tenderness, though she would show special affection to him when he was sickly.
His father Konstantin, while being a cultured man and a keen hunter, was also an alcoholic who suffered from depressive episodes. He had been treated by Moshe Wulff. He would later be diagnosed by Kraepelin with manic depressive disorder. His mother had fallen into a depressive state after the death of a daughter and was thought to have died of suicide, while a paternal uncle of Pankejeff's was diagnosed with paranoia by the neuropsychiatrist Korsakov and admitted to an asylum.
Sergei and his sister Anna were brought up by two servants; Nanja and Grusha and an English governess named Miss Oven. Sergei's education would later be taken over by male tutors.
Sergei attended a grammar school in Russia, but after the 1905 Russian Revolution he spent considerable time abroad studying.

Psychological problems

During his review of Freud's letters and other files, Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson uncovered notes for an unpublished paper by Freud's associate Ruth Mack Brunswick. Freud had asked her to review the Pankejeff case, and she discovered evidence that Pankejeff had been sexually abused by a family member during his childhood.
In 1906, his older sister Anna committed suicide through the use of quicksilver while visiting the site of Mikhail Lermontov's fatal duel. She would die after two weeks of agony.
By 1907, Sergei began to show signs of serious depression. Sergei's father Konstantin also suffered from depression, often connected to specific political happenings of the day, and committed suicide in 1907 by consuming an excess of sleeping medication, a few months after Sergei had left for Munich to seek treatment for his own ailment. While in Munich, Pankejeff saw many doctors and stayed voluntarily at a number of elite psychiatric hospitals. In the summers, he always visited Russia.
During a stay in Kraepelin's sanatorium near Neuwittelsbach, he met a nurse who worked there, Theresa-Maria Keller, whom he fell in love with and wanted to marry.
Pankejeff's family upon learning about the relationship was against it, as not only was Keller from a lower class, but also she was older than Pankejeff and a divorced woman with a daughter.
The couple would marry in 1914.

Der Wolfsmann (The Wolf Man)

In January 1910, Pankejeff's physician Leonid Drosnes brought him to Vienna to have treatment with Freud. Pankejeff and Freud met with each other many times between February 1910 and July 1914, and a few times thereafter, including a brief psychoanalysis in 1919. Pankejeff's "nervous problems" included his inability to have bowel movements without the assistance of an enema, as well as debilitating depression. Initially, according to Freud, Pankejeff resisted opening up to full analysis, until Freud gave him a year deadline for analysis, prompting Pankejeff to give up his resistances.
Freud's first publication on the "Wolf Man" was "From the History of an Infantile Neurosis", written at the end of 1914, but not published until 1918. Freud's treatment of Pankejeff centered on a dream the latter had as a very young child which he described to Freud:
Freud's eventual analysis of the dream was that it was the result of Pankejeff having witnessed a "primal scene" — his parents having sex a tergo or more ferarum — at a very young age. Later in the paper, Freud posited the possibility that Pankejeff instead had witnessed copulation between animals, which was displaced to his parents.
Pankejeff's dream played a major role in Freud's theory of psychosexual development, and along with Irma's injection, it was one of the most important dreams for the developments of Freud's theories. Additionally, Pankejeff became one of the main cases used by Freud to prove the validity of psychoanalysis. It was the third detailed case study, after "Notes Upon a Case of Obsessional Neurosis" in 1908, that did not involve Freud analyzing himself, and which brought together the main aspects of catharsis, the unconscious, sexuality, and dream analysis put forward by Freud in his Studies on Hysteria, The Interpretation of Dreams, and his Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality.

Later life

Pankejeff later published his own memoir under Freud's given pseudonym and remained in contact with Freudian disciples until his own death, making him one of the longest-running famous patients in the history of psychoanalysis.
A few years after finishing psychoanalysis with Freud, Pankejeff developed a psychotic delirium. He was observed in a street staring at his reflection in a mirror, convinced that after having consulted and been treated by a dermatologist to correct a minor injury on his nose, his dermatologist had left him with what he perceived to be a hole in his nose. This obsession with this perceived flaw led to an obsessive compulsion to look at himself “in every shop window; he carried a pocket mirror … his fate depended on what it revealed or was about to reveal." Ruth Mack Brunswick, a Freudian, explained the delusion as displaced castration anxiety.
Having lost most of his family's wealth after the Russian Revolution, Pankejeff supported himself and his wife on his salary as an insurance clerk.
The psychoanalytical movement also provided Pankejeff with financial support in Vienna; psychoanalysts like Kurt Eissler dissuaded Pankejeff from talking to any media. The reason for this was that Pankejeff being one of Freud's most famous "cured" patients and the fact revealing that he was still suffering from mental illness would hurt the reputation of Freud and psychoanalysis. Pankejeff was essentially bribed to keep quiet.
In 1938, Pankejeff's wife committed suicide by inhaling gas. She had been depressed since the death of her daughter. As this coincided with the Anschluss; and the suicide wave among Jews who were trapped in Austria, research has also suggested that she was actually Jewish and that her suicide was prompted by her fear of the Nazis.
Facing a major crisis and not being able to get help from Ruth Mack Brunswick who had fled to Paris, Pankejeff approached Muriel Gardiner who managed to get him a visa to travel there. He would later follow her to London before returning to Vienna in 1938.
Throughout the following decades, Pankejeff would go through some emotional crises which would ultimately lead to him becoming depressive. One of them being the death of Pankejeff's mother in 1953.
Pankejeff would receive intermittent treatment for these episodes from various psychoanalysts, most frequently by the head of The Vienna Psychoanalytical Society Alfred von Winterstein and then by his successor, Wilhelm Solms-Rödelheim.
Gardiner would also supply him with "wonder pills" to help Pankejeff alleviate his emotional turmoil.
In July 1977, Pankejeff suffered a heart attack and then contracted pneumonia. He was admitted to the Steinhof psychiatric hospital in Vienna.
Pankejeff broke his silence and agreed to talk to Karin Obholzer. Their conversations, which took place between January 1974 to September 1976, would later be recounted in the book "Conversations with the Wolf-Man Sixty years later" in 1980, after Pankejeff's death and per his own wishes. In Pankejeff's own words, his treatment by Freud had been "catastrophic."

Death

Pankejeff died on the 12th of May 1979 at the age of 92.

Criticism of Freud's interpretation

Critics, beginning with Otto Rank in 1926, have questioned the accuracy and efficacy of Freud's psychoanalytic treatment of Pankejeff. Similarly, in the mid-20th century, psychiatrist Hervey Cleckley dismissed Freud's diagnosis as far-fetched and entirely speculative. Dorpat has suggested that Freud's behavior in the Pankejeff case as an example of gaslighting.
Daniel Goleman wrote in 1990 in the New York Times:
Mária Török and Nicolas Abraham have reinterpreted the Wolf Man's case, presenting their notion of "the crypt" and what they call “cryptonyms." They provide a different analysis of the case than Freud, whose conclusions they criticise. According to the authors, Pankejeff's statements hide other statements, while the actual content of his words can be illuminated by looking into his multi-lingual background. According to the authors, Pankejeff hid secrets concerning his older sister, and as the Wolf Man both wanted to forget and preserve these issues, he encrypted his older sister, as an idealised "other" in the heart of himself, and spoke these secrets out loud in a cryptic manner, through words hiding behind words, rebuses, wordplays etc. For example, in the Wolf Man's dream, where six or seven wolves were sitting in a tree outside his bedroom window, the expression "pack of six", a "sixter" = shiestorka: siestorka = sister, which gives the conclusion that his sister is placed in the centre of the trauma.
The case forms a central part of the second plateau of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari's A Thousand Plateaus, titled "One or Several Wolves?" In it, they repeat the accusation made in Anti-Oedipus that Freudian analysis is unduly reductive and that the unconscious is actually a "machinic assemblage". They argue that wolves are a case of the pack or multiplicity and that the dream was part of a schizoid experience.