Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality Author:Sigmund Freud An Unabridged Edition to include, but not limited to: Introduction to Translation ? Author's Preface to the Second Edition ? Author's Preface to the Third Edition ? The Sexual Aberrations ? Deviation in Reference to the Sexual Object ? Inversion ? The Behavior of Inverts ? Conception of Inversion ? Degeneration ? Innateness ? Explanation of Inve... more »rsion ? The Relation of Bisexuality ? The Sexual Object of Inverts ? The Sexual Aim of Inverts ? The Sexually Immature and Animals as Sexual Objects ? Deviation in Reference to the Sexual Aim ? Anatomical Transgression ? Overestimation of the Sexual Object ? Sexual Utilization of the Mucous Membrane of the Lips and Mouth ? Sexual Utilization of the Anal Opening ? The Significance of Other Parts of the Body ? Unfit Substitutes for the Sexual Object ? Fetichism ? Fixation of Precursory Sexual Aims ? The Appearance of New Intentions ? Touching and Looking ? Sadism and Masochism ? General Statements Applicable To All Perversions ? Variation and Disease ? The Psychic Participation in the Perversions ? Two Results ? The Sexual Impulse in Neurotics ? Psychoanalysis ? Results of Psychoanalysis ? Neurosis and Perversion ? Partial Impulses and Erogenous Zone ? Explanation of the Manifest Preponderance of Sexual Perversions in the Psychoneuroses ? Reference to the Infantilism of Sexuality ? The Infantile Sexuality ? The Neglect of the Infantile ? Infantile Amnesia ? The Sexual Latency Period of Childhood & Its Interruptions ? The Sexual Inhibition ? Reaction Formation and Sublimation ? The Manifestations of the Infantile Sexuality ? Thumbsucking ? Autoerotism ? The Sexual Aim of the Infantile Sexuality ? The Characters of the Erogenous Zones ? The Infantile Sexual Aim ? The Masturbatic Sexual Manifestations ? The Activity of the Anal Zone ? The Activity of the Genital Zone ? The Return of the Infantile Masturbation ? Polymorphous?Perverse Disposition ? Partial Impulses ? The Infantile Sexual Investigation ? Inquisitiveness ? The Riddle of the Sphinx ? The Castration Complex ? Birth Theories ? Sadistic Conception of the Sexual Act ? The Typical Failure of the Infantile Sexual Investigation ? The Phases of Development of the Sexual Organization ? Pregenital Organizations ? Ambivalence ? The Two Periods of Object Selection ? The Sources of the Infantile Sexuality ? Mechanical Excitation ? Muscular Activity ? Affective Processes ? Intellectual Work ? Diverse Sexual Constitutions ? The Paths of Opposite Influences ? The Transformation of Puberty ? The Primacy of the Genital Zones and the Fore?Pleasure ? The Sexual Tension ? Fore?pleasure Mechanism ? Dangers of the Fore?pleasure ? The Problem of Sexual Excitement ? The Rôle of the Sexual Substance ? Overestimation of the Internal Genitals ? Chemical Theories ? The Theory of the Libido ? Differentiation Between Man and Woman ? The Leading Zones in Man and Woman ? The Object?Finding ? The Sexual Object of the Nursing Period ? Infantile Fear ? Incest Barriers ? The After Effects of the Infantile Object Selection ? Prevention of Inversion ? Summary ? The Factors Disturbing the Development ? Constitution and Heredity ? Further Elaboration ? Repression ? Sublimation ? Accidental Experiences ? Prematurity ? Temporal Factors ? Adhesion ? Fixation« less
It is in this seminal work that Freud first describes his theories on the development, aberrations, and transformations of the sexual instinct from its earliest beginnings in childhood.