Click here to Read Merton Shill’s review of the Movie Crash
Review of Brokeback Mountain by Merton Shill
Review of The Girl with the Pearl Earing by Merton Shill
Review of Nineteen Nineteen by Richard Gottlieb
Review of Perfume by Judith Mitrani
Review of Nineteen Nineteen By Arlene Kramer Richards
Nineteen Nineteen
Reviewed by Arlene Kramer Richards
The wind drew off
Like hungry dogs
Defeated of a bone
Through fissures in
Volcanic cloud
The yellow lightning shone-
The trees held up
Their mangled limbs
Like animals in pain
When nature falls upon herself
Beware an Austrian.
Emily Dickinson Poem 1703 in: The Poems of Emily Dickinson. Edited by R.
W. Franklin. Cambridge MA: Harvard nd.
The storms clouds gathered in the presentiment of war and following
uneasy truce in Dickinson’s uneasy nineteenth century before and after the
War Between the States. They gathered again in Europe before and after the
First World War. And they gather now. Austria is the center of Europe-and
was especially so in 1919 when the divide between the Russian East and the
countries we know as Western Europe faced off against each other and
Russia’s revolution seemed to threaten the West as the West threatened
Russia. In that frightening atmosphere the Austro-Hungarian Empire looked
to Vienna for a center and a reason for being, Vienna trembled, and Freud
tried to figure out what was causing his patients’ anxiety and depression.
The first world war years were the background of the year 1919: war is
death and the anxiety of dying. That anxiety plays against the anxiety of
love. In Europe after the First World War as in Emily Dickinson’s New
England after the Civil War, when men go off to die, women are left to be
single for the rest of their lives.
Continue reading Review of Nineteen Nineteen By Arlene Kramer Richards
On Time and Timelessness in Psychoanalysis by Charles Hanly
“Capote”: A Story in 3 Films
Capote, based on Gerald Clarke’s biography, tells the story of Truman Capote’s writing of In Cold Blood. It covers the period from 1959, when Truman Capote becomes interested in writing an article for the New Yorker on the murder of an entire family in a farmhouse in Kansas, to 1965, when the killers are executed by hanging. The film unobtrusively gives us the pieces to put together the character and pathological narcissism of the central character. 1 Two other well known films intersect with this one to help us understand the childhood antecedents. Continue reading “Capote”: A Story in 3 Films
A Review of A Road to Unity by Leo Rangell, reviewed by Arnold Richards
What’s What, and Where
We are continually trying to improve on the functionality of the website and create a consistent structure so that you can easily find items of interest. In addition to commentary in the form of blog posts, you will also find blog postings about meetings, publications and such. Each posting is assigned to one or more categories, and the categories box toward the top left of your screen allows you to filter the front page to display blog posts from only a selected catagory. Because posts so quickly scroll off the page of a busy blog, we have also created a number of static pages that you may access from the menu buttons near the top of the page. Here is a brief description of what you will find on each of those pages. Continue reading What’s What, and Where