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With erudition, good humor and skill, Lewis is writing about religion for a generation of religion-hungry readers brought up on a diet of "scientific" jargon and Freudian cliches. His readers are a part of the new surge of curiosity about Christianity which in Britain has floated, besides Lewis, a whole school of literary evangelists (T. S. Eliot, Graham Greene, Dorothy Sayers, et al.). Detective Story Writer Sayers has explained this new interest in Christianity as "spontaneous . . . and not a sort of 'Let's-get-together-and-pep-up-Christianity' stunt by excited missioners, than which nothing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Don v. Devil | 9/8/1947 | See Source »

...Freudian psychiatry a natural enemy of Roman Catholicism? The question was still warm last week, thanks to the set-to between Msgr. Fulton J. Sheen and Psychiatrist Frank J. Curran (TIME, July 28). Not likely to quench the flames of controversy was an article in the Catholic weekly Commonweal by Catholic Psychologist Dr. Harry McNeill, prewar teacher at Fordham University, now a clinical psychologist in the Veterans Administration. Gist of the article: the Church has much to learn from Freud-and vice versa. Excerpts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Freud & the Catholic Church | 8/4/1947 | See Source »

...Catholics might well look into the Freudian description of projection, which is the deflecting of attention from one's own shortcomings by blaming and criticizing others. It is deplorably exemplified among Catholics by our all too prevalent antiSemitism. Catholics of this country are predominantly of recent immigrant stock. ... In the nature of the case, most of them have achieved but a modicum of 'American success' and therefore feel frustrated. They are all too ready to project reasons for their failures on the more vigorous-because more recent-wave of Jewish immigrants...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Freud & the Catholic Church | 8/4/1947 | See Source »

Kafka has also been called a theological writer, a philosophical writer, a Zionist, a Freudian, a bitter social critic, a Kafkaist. Plain readers may brush aside the tags. For them two facts are important: 1) to express the manifold, intangible anguish of life, Kafka told his greatest stories in the condition of dreams (he understood that dreams, despite their infinite fluidity of merging forms, have great narrative economy); 2) as a symbolist (Kafka's long books are called novels chiefly by reason of their length), he found for his two greatest stories, The Trial and The Castle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Tragic Sense of Life | 4/28/1947 | See Source »

...them. Last week a surrealist one-man show in Manhattan gave onlookers the pleasure of being in on the laughs. The paintings, by a dour little Belgian named René Magritte, have Salvador Dali's technical perfection but none of Dali's tiresome bag of Freudian tricks. Sample Magritte subjects: a fountain-as cool and wet-looking as the real thing-which spouts crystal mirrors, crowns, hands and cornucopias; a cigar box puffing a cigar; a door, set up against the sky, opening to admit a cloud; a glassy-eyed nude crammed into a bottle, entitled "inspiration...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Be Charming | 4/21/1947 | See Source »

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