Roosevelt: A Study in AmbivalenceJackson Press, Incorporated, 1919 - 159 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 50
... person singular from my study , but these pages owe whatever value they may possess to my personal relations with Colonel Roosevelt . The psycho - analyst , however objective he may desire to be , cannot obliterate himself . He must ...
... person singular from my study , but these pages owe whatever value they may possess to my personal relations with Colonel Roosevelt . The psycho - analyst , however objective he may desire to be , cannot obliterate himself . He must ...
Page 54
... for its task of keeping the unconscious opposition in a state of repression . . . . Ap- plied to the treatment of privileged persons , this theory would reveal that their veneration , their very deification , 54 ROOSEVELT.
... for its task of keeping the unconscious opposition in a state of repression . . . . Ap- plied to the treatment of privileged persons , this theory would reveal that their veneration , their very deification , 54 ROOSEVELT.
Page 55
... persons . The law of emo- tional ambivalence , which to - day still governs our emo- tional relations to those whom we love , certainly obtained far more widely in primitive times . The beloved dead had nevertheless roused some hostile ...
... persons . The law of emo- tional ambivalence , which to - day still governs our emo- tional relations to those whom we love , certainly obtained far more widely in primitive times . The beloved dead had nevertheless roused some hostile ...
Page 114
... person . Psychoanalysis goes further and states that the two op- posite feelings not infrequently take the same person as their object . " I was beginning to hate Theodore Roose- velt . Yet , strange to say , this hatred in no way ...
... person . Psychoanalysis goes further and states that the two op- posite feelings not infrequently take the same person as their object . " I was beginning to hate Theodore Roose- velt . Yet , strange to say , this hatred in no way ...
Page 135
... person . I write this letter to you because I hope that eventually you will begin to realize that those who oppose you now are proba- bly better friends and better citizens than those who , after leading you into a blind alley with ...
... person . I write this letter to you because I hope that eventually you will begin to realize that those who oppose you now are proba- bly better friends and better citizens than those who , after leading you into a blind alley with ...
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Common terms and phrases
287 Fourth Avenue admiration ambivalence American citizen Americans of German attacks attitude ATTORNEY Authors Barbarian Belgium believe Blank blood Britain British Colonel Confessions course Dear Dernburg Edgar Allan Poe EDITOR emotional England English fact fair-weather feel Flame foes Freud friends friendship for Germany genius George Bernard Shaw George Sylvester Viereck German Americans German Propaganda Gertrude Atherton hands hate heart Henri Barbusse Hugo Muensterberg Kaiser Labor Relief leader League of America letter literary Louis Mirror ment mind nation neutrality of China never newspaper Nineveh OFFICE OF GEORGE Oyster Bay PADRAIC PEARSE patriotic Perhaps poems poet poetic Poetry Society political Pro-Germanism professed friendship Psychoanalysis remarkable replied Roose Sagamore Hill seemed Shaw Songs of Armageddon sword Theodore Roosevelt things tion to-day tribute unconscious United Vampire velt verse Viereck:-I Vigilantes violation Whitman Wilson write written York City York Evening Mail