Freud's Trip to Orvieto: The Great Doctor's Unresolved Confrontation with Antisemitism, Death, and Homoeroticism; His Passion for Paintings; and the Writer in His Footsteps

Freud's Trip to Orvieto: The Great Doctor's Unresolved Confrontation with Antisemitism, Death, and Homoeroticism; His Passion for Paintings; and the Writer in His Footsteps

by Nicholas Fox Weber
Freud's Trip to Orvieto: The Great Doctor's Unresolved Confrontation with Antisemitism, Death, and Homoeroticism; His Passion for Paintings; and the Writer in His Footsteps

Freud's Trip to Orvieto: The Great Doctor's Unresolved Confrontation with Antisemitism, Death, and Homoeroticism; His Passion for Paintings; and the Writer in His Footsteps

by Nicholas Fox Weber

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Overview

"[An] unusual meditation on sex, death, art, and Jewishness. . . . Weber weaves in musings on his own sexual and religious experiences, creating a freewheeling psychoanalytic document whose approach would surely delight the doctor, even if its conclusions might surprise him." —New Yorker

"Freud's Trip to Orvieto is at once profound and wonderfully diverse, and as gripping as any detective story. Nicholas Fox Weber mixes psychoanalysis, art history, and the personal with an intricacy and spiritedness that Freud himself would have admired." —John Banville, author of The Sea and The Blue Guitar

"This is an ingenious and fascinating reading of Freud's response to Signorelli's frescoes at Orvieto. It is also a meditation on Jewish identity, and on masculinity, memory, and the power of the image. It is filled with intelligence, wit, and clear-eyed analysis not only of the paintings themselves, but how we respond to them in all their startling sexuality and invigorating beauty." —Colm Tóibín, author of Brooklyn and Nora Webster

After a visit to the cathedral at Orvieto in Italy, Sigmund Freud deemed Luca Signorelli's frescoes the greatest artwork he'd ever encountered; yet, a year later, he couldn't recall the artist's name. When the name came back to him, the images he had so admired vanished from his mind's eye. This is known as the "Signorelli parapraxis" in the annals of Freudian psychoanalysis and is a famous example from Freud's own life of his principle of repressed memory. What was at the bottom of this? There have been many theories on the subject, but Nicholas Fox Weber is the first to study the actual Signorelli frescoes for clues.

What Weber finds in these extraordinary Renaissance paintings provides unexpected insight into this famously confounding incident in Freud's biography. As he sounds the depths of Freud's feelings surrounding his masculinity and Jewish identity, Weber is drawn back into his own past, including his memories of an adolescent obsession with a much older woman.

Freud's Trip to Orvieto is an intellectual mystery with a very personal, intimate dimension. Through rich illustrations, Weber evokes art's singular capacity to provoke, destabilize, and enchant us, as it did Freud, and awaken our deepest memories, fears, and desires.

Nicholas Fox Weber is the director of the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation and author of fourteen books, including biographies of Balthus and Le Corbusier. He has written for the New Yorker, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal, Le Monde, ARTnews, Town&Country, and Vogue, among other publications.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781942658276
Publisher: Bellevue Literary Press
Publication date: 05/09/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
File size: 35 MB
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About the Author

Nicholas Fox Weber is the director of the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation and founder and president of Le Korsa, a nonprofit organization devoted to medical care, education, and the arts in isolated villages in rural Senegal. He is the author of fourteen books, including Freud's Trip to Orvieto, biographies of Balthus and Le Corbusier, and numerous exhibition catalogs. His writing has also appeared in the New Yorker, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal, Le Monde, ARTnews, Town&Country, and Vogue, among other publications. He is married to the novelist Katharine Weber, has two adult daughters, and lives in Connecticut, Paris, and southwest Ireland.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Freud’s Memory Loss

1. The Reprint
2. Freud’s Pilgrimages
3. The Text
4. The Karpes Continue
5. Freud’s Trip
6. Names
7. Orvieto
8. What Richard and Marietta Said About All This
9. Fra Angelico
10. Anti-Christ
11. The Identity of the Anti-Christ
12. Maud Cruttwell
13. “A Godless Jew”
14. Am I a Mensch or a Wuss
15. The Conquistador
16. Maud’s Vision
17. Freud and the Etruscans
18. The Devil
19. The Entrance to Hell
20. Maleness
21. The Case of Luca Signorelli
22. Hannibal
23. Jackie
24. Our Bodies, Our Deaths
25. Grandpa’s Funeral
26. Fathers and Sons
27. Enter Jean-Paul Sartre
28. Wanting to be Hannibal
29. Richard and Marietta’s Conclusion
30. What This Meant
31. Signorelli’s Pinups
32. Andre Gide Blocked Too
33. Zilborg
34. Picturing Freud
35. The Man Who Felt Paintings in His Heart and Bones
36. Sarburgh
37. Holbein
38. Raphael
39. Freud on Dostoevsky
40. The Titian
41. The Jew Again
42. The Letter to Fliess
43. Psychopathology of Everyday Life
44. Jacques Lacan’s Take on It
45. Minna Bernays
46. Sobriety
47. The Search Continues
48. Wanting an Answer, and Yearning for the Authority That Will Provide One
49. The Young Blade

Notes
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index
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