-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Fw: revision request
Date: Sun, 19 Jul 2009 16:46:37 -0300
From: jansymello <jansy@aetern.us>
To: Stephen Blackwell <sblackwe@utk.edu>


A. Stadlen [ to B.Boyd's suspicion that "HH kept CQ's name unchanged out of  vindictiveness."] ...] this would be entirely in accord with the Freudian tradition...of pretending to maintain rigorous confidentiality while simultaneously flagrantly breaking it... I only established this fact about  Freud after Nabokov died.

JM: The assertion about a Freudian tradition is as general as Nabokov's, when railing against the Vienna delegation, or like Huxley's fake-beaver's interlocutor: "You make the error of the Viennese. You exagerate the importance of sex."

Now, after at least half a century, we learn that the poet described in Freud's article "On Transience", was R.M.Rilke, as we are cognizant of the real names of The Wolf Man, of Anna O., the Rat Man and many other illustrious patients who, by various means, wanted to have their identities revealed or undersigned books about their experience with Freud. They had a margin of freedom... In contrast, Humbert Humbert didn't worry about preserving Lolita's memory, since the "Confessions" would only be kept from publication while Lolita was alive. She was to remain innocent of HH's manipulative voice and control.  
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