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Перевод: repressed speek repressed


[прилагательное]
подавленный; сдержанный


Тезаурус:

  1. It certainly is erotic, but is perhaps better described, following Eve Sedgwick, as homosocial desire, if only, in the first instance, to avoid the easy but questionable assumption that what we witness here is the irruption of repressed homosexual desire as conceived by Freud.
  2. It's a pain being so repressed, he more or less says.
  3. In Now Voyager he played the family man caught up in a shipboard romance with a repressed spinster, Bette Davis, who has been prescribed a transatlantic cruise by her psychiatrist.
  4. As if someone like me should have sat there quietly like a mouse, demure and repressed!
  5. McLeish repressed the malicious thought that this event might put Francesca's nose just a little bit out of joint.
  6. The studio almost immediately cast her in a cycle of prestigious (if often meretricious) "women's pictures", including Edmund Goulding's Dark Victory (1939), which had her, in its famous climactic scene, walk upstairs to die in solitude with all the dignified serenity of an elephant trundling off to its ancestral graveyard; Michael Curtiz's The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (also 1939), in which she flaunted the Virgin Queen's (and her own) baldness as the ultimate emblem of great, self-abasing character acting; and, of course, Irving Rapper's sudsy, multi-Kleenex tearjerker Now, Voyager (1942), in which her repressed, plain-Jane spinster blossoms overnight into chic, radiant, cigarette-tapping womanhood.
  7. But she is excellent in the play-extracts, lending Amanda in Private Lives just the right touch of acid mockery and hinting at a whole world of repressed longing as the suburban wife in Still Life (the embryonic version of Brief Encounter).
  8. So, whilst in the foregoing passage repressed homosexuality is construed as a cause of a violent and neurotic racism, elsewhere Fanon regards manifest homosexuality as an effect of the same neurotic racism, though now in a masochistic rather than a sadistic form, and especially the masochistic relation of the white man to the black man: "There are, for instance, men who go to "houses'" in order to be beaten by negroes; passive homosexuals who insist on black partners' (pp. 158, 156, 177).
  9. "That's what I mean, it's the return of the repressed.
  10. First, both theories suggest an eventual return of homosexuality: in the one (psychoanalytic) it is a psychic return of the repressed from within, in the other (materialist) a social or cultural return from without; either an inner resurgence of desire through the breakdown of psychic repression, or the oppositional approach via the proximate of the demonized other from beyond, from the social margins where he or she has been discovered, constructed, displaced.
  11. A related problem with the psychoanalytic account is the implication that so many different kinds of close relationship between heterosexually identified men, be they complicated or simple, conflicted or supportive, brutally vindictive or discerningly tender, are really rooted in repressed homosexuality.
  12. This seems more like an eroticism created by rather than repressed by the social bond.
  13. It is probably the case that we live in a time when the cultural return of homosexuality exacerbates, even intensifies, the psychic return of repressed homosexuality.

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