ellauri106.html on line 71: In 1962, the same year Letting Go was published, Roth became Writer-in-Residence at Princeton University. After separating from his wife, Roth began a five-year psychoanalysis with the New York psychiatrist Hans J. Kleinschmidt, who published the case history anonymously in a medical journal in 1967 under the title The Angry Act: The Role of Aggression in Creativity. Roth traveled to Israel for the first time in June 1963. He participated in the American Jewish Congress, held discussions with Israeli intellectuals and Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion. From 1965 to 1977 Roth had a lectureship in comparative literature at the University of Pennsylvania.
ellauri109.html on line 545: Roth started seeing Hans Kleinschmidt, an eccentric name-dropping psychoanalyst, three or four days a week. Asked later how he could justify the expense ($27.50 a session), Roth said, “It kept me from killing my first wife.”
ellauri109.html on line 547: Roth’s extramarital forays were numerous, Kleinschmidt was right about that.
ellauri109.html on line 551: Kleinschmidt published a journal article in which he describes the case of a “successful Southern playwright” with an overbearing mother: “His rebellion was sexualized, leading to compulsive masturbation which provided an outlet for a myriad of hostile fantasies. These same masturbatory fantasies he both acted out and channeled into his writing.” Roth, who was obviously Kleinschmidt’s “playwright,” saw the article just after finishing the novel. He spent multiple sessions berating Kleinschmidt for this “psychoanalytic cartoon” and yet continued his analysis with him for years.
ellauri222.html on line 469: Eleanor Klein is the one unmarried daughter of the Kleins; she is too fat to get a husband and is kind to Augie. She goes to Mexico during the Depression to stay with a cousin who makes leather jackets. She hopes to marry him, but is disappointed.
ellauri345.html on line 571: Ein gleiches Bild können wir finden, wenn wir uns ein Auto anschauen. Da ist „das Auto“. Und dann sind da die Teile und Kleinstteile. Das Auto hat Sitze und Räder, einen Motor und Fenster, viel Blech und einen Auspuff, Kabel, Flüssigkeiten, Elektronik und schier unendlich viele Schrauben, Muttern und Dichtungen.
xxx/ellauri068.html on line 265: Vähän ennen kuolemaansa Rautanen vihittiin Helsingin yliopistossa teologisen tiedekunnan kunniatohtoriksi. Rautanen sai paikallisilta lempinimen Nakambale, joka tarkoittaa "sitä joka pitää hattua". Hän piti usein kalottia, jonka ambomaalaiset käsittivät palmukoriksi. Nakambale-sana tulee okambale-sanasta, joka merkitsee pientä koria. Rautanen tunnettiin Nakambalena niin hyvin, että nimi kirjoitettiin jopa hänen hautakiveensä. Häntä kunnioitetaan Namibiassa erittäin paljon vielä nykyisinkin, vaikka hänen kuolemastaan on kulunut jo 90 vuotta. Rautanen meni vuonna 1872 naimisiin saksalaisen lähetyssaarnaajan Franz Kleinschmidt'in tyttären Friedan kanssa. Rautaset saivat yhdeksän lasta, mutta moni lapsista kuoli jo pienenä malariaan.
xxx/ellauri123.html on line 638: If not, it’s not fuel or oxygen that’s missing. Only you can refill that fire hose because it rests limp inside your Calvin Kleins. Choose to fondle that lame thing. Erect it. Hold it tight. And let it shine for everyone to see.
xxx/ellauri125.html on line 443: Roth's shrink Kleinschmidt published a journal article in which he
xxx/ellauri125.html on line 448: obviously Kleinschmidt’s “playwright,” saw the article just after finishing the
xxx/ellauri125.html on line 449: novel. He spent multiple sessions berating Kleinschmidt for this “psychoanalytic
xxx/ellauri215.html on line 133: Kleinschmidt published a journal article in which he describes the case of a “successful Southern playwright” with an overbearing mother: “His rebellion was sexualized, leading to compulsive masturbation which provided an outlet for a myriad of hostile fantasies. These same masturbatory fantasies he both acted out and channeled into his writing.”
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