The insights here are of such depth, and contain such beauty in
them, that time and again the reader must pause for breath. At last
Rilke has met a critic whose insight, courage, and humanity are
worthy of his life and work."
--Leslie Epstein Director, Graduate Creative Writing Program,
Boston University
" A] well-reasoned, fairly fascinating, and illuminating study
which soundly and convincingly applies Freudian and particularly
post-Freudian insights into the self, to Rilke's life and work, in
a way which enlightens us considerably as to the relationship
between life and work in original ways. Kleinbard takes off where
Hugo Simenauer's monumental psycho- biography of Rilke (1953) left
off. . . . He succeeds in giving us a psychic portrait of the poet
which is more illuminating and which . . . does greater justice to
its subject than any of his predecessors.. . . . Any reader with
strong interest in Rilke would certainly welcome the availability
of this study."
--Walter H. Sokel, Commonwealth Professor of German and English
Literatures, University of Virginia.
For beauty is nothing but the beginning of terror, which we are
just able to bear, and we wonder at it so because it calmly
disdainsto destroy us."
--Rilke
Beginning with Rilke's 1910 novel, The Notebooks of Malte
Laurids Brigge, "The Beginning of Terror" examines the ways in
which the poet mastered the illness that is so frightening and
crippling in Malte and made the illness a resource for his art.
Kleinbard goes on to explore Rilke's poetry, letters, and
non-fiction prose, his childhood and marriage, and the relationship
between illness and genius in the poet and his work, a subject to
which Rilke returned time and again.
This psychoanalytic study also defines the complex connections
between Malte's and Rilke's fantasies of mental and physical
fragmentation, and the poet's response to Rodin's disintegrative
and re-integrative sculpture during the writing of The Notebooks
and New Poems. One point of departure is the poet's sense of the
origins of his illness in his childhood and, particularly, in his
mother's blind, narcissistic self- absorption and his father's
emotional constriction and mental limitations. Kleinbard examines
the poet's struggle to purge himself of his deeply felt
identification with his mother, even as he fulfilled her hopes that
he become a major poet. The book also contains chapters on Rilke's
relationships with Lou Andreas Salom and Aguste Rodin, who served
as parental surrogates for Rilke.
A psychological portrait of the early twentieth-century German
poet, "The Beginning of Terror" explores Rilke's poetry, letters,
non-fiction prose, his childhood and marriage. David Kleinbard
focuses on the relationship between illness and genius in the poet
and his work, a subject to which Rilke returned time and again.
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