Reik biography artist example
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The Biographer And His Hero
One should write only about what one loves.” Ernest Renan, the biographer and historian, said it in the last century; and lor this writer at least it is profoundly true, the more impressive because in Renan’s lifetime he withstood prolonged literary attacks. If so tough-fibered an author confessed that he loved his subjects, why might not the rest of us do the same? For a considerable time it was unfashionable to admire one’s biographical hero; the debunking period lasted a full generation. Lytton Strachey started it, and on the whole it was a healthy movement, a reaction against the laudatory familial biography of the nineteenth century. But Strachey was a brilliantly talented writer; his imitators and followers did not have his genius, and the art of biography suffered. We outgrew the fashion, perhaps because debunking is easy and what is too easy does not hold up. Anthony Trollope said, “There is no way of writing well and also of writing easily.”
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Reik, Theodor
Related papers
Aleksandar Grizhev
XXIII Scientific international conference “Knowledge in practice”, 2019
The term radicalization fryst vatten wide spread today, but the search for what exactly radicalization is, and how to de-radicalize those who are considered violent extremists or terrorists is still a challenge for the academic and professional community. In this paper, the key terms and literature focusing on radicalization will be explored in more detail. Political violence encompasses a bred range of political action-persuasive politics, pressure politics and violent politics-by those with state power, as well as by non-state stridbar actors. With this in mind, it should also be recognized that radicalization is not necessarily a one-sided phenomenon, as it is equally important to explore the role of state actors and their potential for radicalization. There are a number of factors that can lead to radicalization, as well as factors that may
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Wilhelm Reich
Austrian-American psychoanalyst (1897–1957)
Wilhelm Reich | |
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Portrait by Ludwig Gutmann (Vienna, before 1943) | |
| Born | (1897-03-24)24 March 1897 Dobzau, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, Austria-Hungary |
| Died | 3 November 1957(1957-11-03) (aged 60) United States Penitentiary, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
| Resting place | Orgonon, Rangeley, Maine, U.S. 44°59′28″N70°42′50″W / 44.991027°N 70.713902°W / 44.991027; -70.713902 |
| Nationality | Austrian |
| Education | University of Vienna (MD, 1922) |
| Speciality | Psychoanalysis |
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| Relatives | Robert Rei
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