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...this type of regression contains one immense surprise: the resulting child-adult turns out to be not the radiant and innocent child Jean-Jacques Rousseau imagined but rather a hard, half-blind, furiously offended, rancorous, enraged infant capable of any atrocity. As the late Austrian child psychoanalyst Melanie Klein noted, the thwarted infant feels a desire to tear up everything, wipe out both parents...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ROBERT BLY ON THE MIND OF THE UNABOMBER SUSPECT | 4/22/1996 | See Source »

...have such a vast reputation? Largely because he was seen as a living bridge between the classical tradition of French landscape and contemporary painting, whether by contemporary you meant the Barbizon painters of the mid-19th century, like Theodore Rousseau and Charles Daubigny, or the more recent vision of Monet and the Impressionists. Corot's career began in the 1820s, at a time when classical landscape--the ideal scene with temples, ruins and mellow boscage, populated by figures out of Ovid's Metamorphoses or Vergil's Georgics--was still very much a part of French art. Its greatest exponents, Nicolas...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ART: BRINGING NATURE HOME | 3/25/1996 | See Source »

After lecturing about the philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Frank stopped midway and suggested that the class discuss his concept of the state of nature...

Author: By Alexander T. Nguyen, | Title: Gov. 10 Students Get Extra-Long Weekend | 11/14/1995 | See Source »

...wish-list for the future are perfecting his French in order to better read Rousseau and teaching a course on wit and humor in literature...

Author: By Sarak J. Schaffer, | Title: Damrosch Delivers, Dramatically | 11/6/1995 | See Source »

BLAME IT ALL ON JEAN-JACQUES Rousseau, whose Confessions shocked 18th century France with its author's admissions of sexual masochism and other private deviancies. The great philosopher didn't just help start the French Revolution with his writings; he ushered in a publishing genre--the confessional memoir. More than 200 years later the literary form is thriving. Not just the celebrity memoir in which show-biz and sports icons "tell all" about the pain behind the fame. More recently has come a flood of what might be called just-plain-folks memoirs--intensely personal yet highly literary accounts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: THEY'VE GOT A SECRET | 10/23/1995 | See Source »

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