Roazen received his A.B. at
Harvard University in 1958. He then studied at the
University of Chicago and
Magdalen College, Oxford, before returning to Harvard for his PhD dissertation, which bore on Freud's political and social thought. After teaching at Harvard as an assistant professor in Government, he taught Social and Political Science at
York University in Toronto from 1971 until his early retirement in 1995.
In 1965 Roazen began to interview surviving friends, relatives, colleagues and patients of
Sigmund Freud. His first 'big' book, 1975's Freud and His Followers, was based on hundreds of hours of interviews with patients and students of Freud. The resulting portrait of Freud illustrated biases and indiscretions that seemed inconsistent with his stated methods.[1] This was a path-breaking and influential work, which remains a basic reference for historians of psychoanalysis today.
Roazen was the first non-psychoanalyst whom
Anna Freud allowed to access the archives of the
British Psychoanalytic Institute. He was able to see the huge amount of material
Ernest Jones had used to write his biography of Freud.
In 1993 Roazen became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and in 2004 he became an honorary member of the American Psychoanalytic Association.[1]
His papers are collected in the Paul Roazen Collection of the Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center,
Boston University.
On November 3, 2005, he died at age 69 at his home in Cambridge from complications of
Crohn's disease.[1] He was survived by two sons, one of whom is professor of comparative literature
Daniel Heller-Roazen.[1]
Writings
Author
Freud: Political and Social Thought, New York, Knopf, 1968
Brother Animal: The Story of Freud and Tausk, N.Y., Knopf, 1969
Freud and his Followers, New York, Knopf, 1975
Erik H. Erikson: The Power and Limits of a Vision, N.Y., The Free Press, 1976
Helene Deutsch: A Psychoanalyst’s Life, N.Y., Doubleday, 1985
"Freud's last will", in Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis, 18(3), 1990, 383–385.
Encountering Freud: The Politics and Histories of Psychoanalysis, New Brunswick, N.J., Transaction Publishers, 1990
Meeting Freud’s Family, Amherst, University of Massachusetts Press, 1993
Heresy:
Sandor Rado and the Psychoanalytic Movement, with Bluma Swerdloff, Northvale, N.J., Aronson, 1995
How Freud Worked: First-Hand Accounts of Patients, Northvale, N.J., J. Aronson, 1995
Canada’s King: An Essay in Political Psychology, Oakville, Ontario, Mosaic Press, 1998
Oedipus in Britain:
Edward Glover and the Struggle over Klein, N.Y., Other Press, 2000
Political Theory and the Psychology of the Unconscious: Freud, J. S. Mill, Nietzsche, Dostoevsky, Fromm, Bettelheim, and Erikson, London, Open Gate Press, 2000
The Historiography of Psychoanalysis, New Brunswick (US) ; London (UK), Transaction Publishers, 2001
The Trauma of Freud: Controversies in Psychoanalysis, New Brunswick, N.J., Transaction Publishers, 2002
Cultural Foundations of Political Psychology, New Brunswick, N.J., Transaction Publishers, 2003
Edoardo Weiss: The House that Freud Built, New Brunswick, N.J., Transaction Publishers, 2005
Editor
Victor Tausk: Sexuality, War, and Schizophrenia: Collected Psychoanalytic Papers, edited and with an introduction by Paul Roazen, translations by
Eric Mosbacher and others. Taylor & Francis, 1991.