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Word: freudianly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...more offensive than the looseness of her scholarship and style is her psychoanalytic approach to literature. In Miss Ward's hands, the dubious tool of Freudian literary analysis becomes simply gossip. "Just as he lost his fatrer," she writes, "at the age when he needed him most keenly, he found and then lost his mother again at the time of his sexual reawakening." (Keats was fifteen then: sexual reawakening?) Distasteful as that sort of thing is when it concerns Keats's personal life, it recovers at least to the level of patent silliness where literature is involved. "Though 'Calidore...

Author: By Max Byrd, | Title: Keats the Poet | 9/25/1963 | See Source »

...serenity, and ads that suggest snob appeal fall flat. Italians, though they bred Gina and Sophia, are prudish about sex and seminudity. "We can't present a woman as a sex kitten," moans an adman in Italy, where the Maidenform girl is photographed modestly at home and forgoes Freudian dreams...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Advertising: That Local Touch | 9/20/1963 | See Source »

...Delvaux's work. In one canvas, a female nude walks through a garden past a group of fully clothed scholars, and, like the sad little figure in the ads entitled "In Philadelphia nearly everybody reads the Bulletin," is wholly ignored. And Delvaux's trains could be a Freudian symbol for the male sex drive or an occult reference to death. But Delvaux ignores all that sort of speculation. He paints trains, he says, probably because they remind him of happy trips he took during his childhood. As for his nudes, they are not live actors; they are "extras...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Poetic Shock | 6/28/1963 | See Source »

...human. He is an aging politician, she is his ambitious mistress. The script says they are in love but they obviously aren't. Nothing suggests that the most famous lovers of all time felt anything better than lust. What the hero calls love is a Freudian fixation, what the heroine calls love is a power complex. The motives of the central characters are confused and ultimately mean, and as a result their tragedy is befuddled and ultimately petty...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Just One of Those Things | 6/21/1963 | See Source »

...shall never learn; nor, a senior realizes, should one attempt to absorb all of life in a few years. But some of us have been frightened into submission. As a freshman one is shocked when he encounters classmates who can discuss Rousseau's Social Contract, or Ulysses, or Freudian theory, with absolute fluency. One constructs long summer reading lists, or projects complex plans of study, which are never completed. By the middle of sophomore year one has grown desperate over the amount of reading one must still do in order to become a fit candidate for a Harvard education...

Author: By Paul S. Cowan, | Title: A Letter From a Graduating Senior | 6/13/1963 | See Source »

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