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...origins, Salome was educated at home in Saint Petersburg and at the University of Zurich. In the course of her many travels she became a friend of Nietzsche, a companion, guide and confessor to Rilke (it was she who first introduced him to Russia), and a favorite pupil of Freud. She knew Wedekind, Hofmannsthal, Schnitzler, and Hauptman. She met Stringberg and the great stage director Max Reinhardt, and Martin Buber encouraged her writing...

Author: By Alice VAN Buren, | Title: Sigmund Freud's First Lady | 4/28/1973 | See Source »

...lady of splendid connections. She was also a novelist, critic, and thinker in her own right, figuring among the leading authoresses of her day. She write several novels, a play, a critical work on Ibsen's heroines, an exposition of Neitzsche, and an autobiography, Lebensruckblick, which along with her Freud Journal, is her best known work today...

Author: By Alice VAN Buren, | Title: Sigmund Freud's First Lady | 4/28/1973 | See Source »

Already having a reputation as a psychological writer, in 1911, at the age of 50, she turned to the study of psychoanalysis. In 1912, she wrote to Freud and promptly joined his circle, then in Vienna. Once under his influence, she never escaped. Till the end of her life (1937) she remained his singularly uncritical devotee, and supported him at every tug on the orthdox line throughout the squabbles with Jung, Adler, Rank and the others...

Author: By Alice VAN Buren, | Title: Sigmund Freud's First Lady | 4/28/1973 | See Source »

When the new, anticlerical Republican government expelled Spanish Jesuits in 1932, Arrupe finished his studies in other parts of Europe and the U.S. After his ordination in 1936, he began to study psychiatry, but was stopped short by superiors who were then uneasy about a marriage between Jesus and Freud. His new assignment: Japan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Witness to the Apocalypse | 4/23/1973 | See Source »

Torn between Freud and Marx, Fanon flung himself into the opening phase of the Algerian revolution and became one of the FLN's chief pamphleteers and theorists. He fell sick, journeyed to Moscow for a cure, but was eventually told by Soviet specialists that the only hope for his leukemia lay in Washington, D.C. In the National Institutes of Health hospital in Bethesda, Md., weeks before he died in 1961 at age 36, he received the first copies of his last and most revolutionary book, The Wretched of the Earth. The FLN had his body flown to Tunis...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Master and Slave | 4/2/1973 | See Source »

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