Cesare Musatti | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Born | 21 September 1897 |
| Died | 21 March 1989 (aged 91) Milan, Italy |
| Citizenship | |
| Alma mater | University of Padua |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Psychoanalysis |
Cesare Luigi Musatti (21 September 1897 - 21 March 1989) was an Italian philosopher and psychoanalyst. He was a leading figure for the first generation of Italian psychoanalysts. [1] [2] Musatti studied under Vittorio Benussi before becoming his assistant. [2] Musatti edited the Italian edition of the works of Sigmund Freud. [3]
Musatti's mother was a non-practicing Neapolitan Catholic, while father was Elia Musatti, a Venetan Jew who had been elected as a socialist deputy to the Italian parliament where he became a friend of Giacomo Matteotti. Musatti was neither baptised nor circumcised. During the fascist persecutions after the passage of Italy's racial laws, he managed to obtain a false baptisimal certificate from the Carmelites at Santa Maria in Traspontina. Though unreligious, he had his own children baptised according to the rites of the Waldensian Evangelical Church.