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Restoration of the Bose–Freud Correspondence
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Chapter 2 compares the second phase of the Bose–Freud correspondence with the first two periods of Freud’s correspondence with Romain Rolland. Freud’s preference for Oedipal insights is explored along with his slow-to-emerge interest in the pre-Oedipal, as discussed by Harold Blum and Madalon Sprengnether. Both Bose and Rolland introduced pre-Oedipal themes to Freud, Bose in his letters and writings and Rolland in the “oceanic feeling” he described to Freud, which Freud acknowledged in Civilization and Its Discontents. Freud also explored the pre-Oedipal before this in his study of Leonardo da Vinci, as discussed by Ilse Barande. The chapter ends with an insight from Henri and Madeleine Vermorel about Freud’s letter to Rolland, “A Disturbance of Memory on the Acropolis,” that opens up Freud’s earliest screen memory about the death of his brother Julius.
Title: Restoration of the Bose–Freud Correspondence
Description:
Chapter 2 compares the second phase of the Bose–Freud correspondence with the first two periods of Freud’s correspondence with Romain Rolland.
Freud’s preference for Oedipal insights is explored along with his slow-to-emerge interest in the pre-Oedipal, as discussed by Harold Blum and Madalon Sprengnether.
Both Bose and Rolland introduced pre-Oedipal themes to Freud, Bose in his letters and writings and Rolland in the “oceanic feeling” he described to Freud, which Freud acknowledged in Civilization and Its Discontents.
Freud also explored the pre-Oedipal before this in his study of Leonardo da Vinci, as discussed by Ilse Barande.
The chapter ends with an insight from Henri and Madeleine Vermorel about Freud’s letter to Rolland, “A Disturbance of Memory on the Acropolis,” that opens up Freud’s earliest screen memory about the death of his brother Julius.
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