A biography deirdre bair
- Deirdre Bair was an American literary scholar and biographer.
- Examines the psychological agonies of Beckett's young manhood, his World War II heroism, his enigmatic character, and the growth of his style.
- Deirdre Bair (June 21, 1935 – April 17, 2020) was an American literary scholar and biographer.
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Bair is the first and only biographer to gain the trust and cooperation of the Jung heirs. Others have followed suit and have given Bair access that no previous researcher has had. Bair won the National Book Award for Samuel Beckett: A Biography. Simone de Beauvoir was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and selected as one of the New York Times' Best Books of the Year. Anais Nin was a New York Times Notable Book and was adapted for a BBC documentary. This authoritative biography will be the source for all future research and scholarship on Jung and on the history of psychoanalysis. The book reveals the untold truth about Jung's secret work for the Allies during WWII, his controversial affair with one of his patients, and the contents of his private papers, as well as never before published photos. Critical Praise
Simone De Beauvoir: A BiographyDecember 4, 2013
An expansive read, but well worth the time. To touch on the author, Bair’s, actual construction--it read in journalistic style but was sectioned into chapters that left you with whole ideas and themes within Beauvoir’s life. I appreciated that, as some biographies I've read often resigned to bait-and-switch, and though that approach may propel you throughout fiction, in biography you lose some of the sense of growth, change and large periods of time building upon each other to create a complete portrait of the subject.
As for Beauvoir herself, this book is very keen to emphasize that Beauvoir was very much philosophically dependent on Sartre for most of her life. However, I interpreted Beauvoir’s firm role as reminding Sartre of the ideas of Being and Nothingness as her own philosophy--the fact that she did not constantly move with his own philosophical fluctuation shows that she has convictions of her own, and that in many ways the ideas of Being and Nothingness were created at the pinnacle of his respect for her, when they were c
Samuel BeckettAugust 15, 2024
Deirdre Bair, may she rest in peace, was the first biographer to be permitted by the Master to attempt to infiltrate the impenetrable mist of obfuscation with which he purposefully had always surrounded himself. She was at the time an American former graduate student who lionized his enlightened aura.
She sees Beckett from the outside, being a little wet behind the ears. Sure, she digs, and in fact was the first to publicly talk of Beckett's certified unstable mental health during and after the War. Beckett's ultimate authorized biographer, James Knowlson, dismissed such claims, though doubtless Bair, in the seventies had able access to interviews with Beckett's wartime confrères. Hers is an extroverted biography. Perhaps she dug too deep for the writer's liking. In it, for instance we learn of Beckett’s brief fling with the heiress Gloria Vanderbilt, terminated abruptly by Beckett, apparently, as her sophisticated lifestyle may have driven him close to his Dark Side, of which he was petrified. In my understanding of his tight-lipped silence on Copyright ©cakestot.pages.dev 2025 |