Erich Fromm (1900-1980) is known to most readers as the author of the
international bestseller The Art of Loving (1956). What may be less
widely known is that Fromm was a social psychoanalyst whose
psychoanalytic theories, developed around a humanistic concept of man
and society, have had a profound impact on many fields and disciplines:
on social life and societal organization, on politics, on religion, on
psychotherapy and, last but not least, on the practice of mindfulness.
Rainer Funk was Erich Fromm's last assistant. He wrote his dissertation
about Fromm, was designated by Fromm's last will to be his sole literary
executor, and is the editor of Fromm's writings. From his very intimate
knowledge of Fromm's life and ideas, and his access to an archive that
includes 6,000 letters, Funk introduces Fromm's central concepts and
examines them in relation to Fromm's lived experiences and to his idea
that life itself is an art.
The question of "the art of living" runs through all of the chapters,
from the Introduction, in which Funk describes meeting Fromm for the
first time in 1972, to the last chapter, in which Funk reflects on the
impact of Fromm's social-psychoanalytic writings and his efforts to live
well.