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Brenda Webster

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Language
  
English

Spouse
  
Ira M. Lapidus

Role
  
Writer


Name
  
Brenda Webster

Nationality
  
American

Parents
  
Ethel Schwabacher


Occupation
  
Writer, critic and translator

Alma mater
  
Swarthmore College, Barnard College, Columbia University, UC Berkeley

Notable works
  
Vienna Triangle, The Beheading Game, The Last Good Freudian

Education
  
Columbia University, Swarth College, University of California, Berkeley, Barnard College

Relatives
  
Ethel Schwabacher, George Oppen

Books
  
Vienna triangle, The last good Freudian, The beheading game, Yeats: A Psychoanalytic Study, After Auschwitz: A Love St

180818 Brenda Webster on Arby Guiness RRFO


Brenda Webster is an American writer, critic and translator. She is the author of five novels, including The Beheading Game (2006) and Vienna Triangle (2009), which appeared on bestseller lists in both the San Francisco Chronicle and the Los Angeles Times. Her most recent novel, After Auschwitz: A Love Story, published in 2013, is a story of an elderly man dealing with the early stages of dementia as he struggles to hold on to his memories and cope with his changing relationship to his wife.

Contents

Webster is the current president of PEN West.

Biography

Brenda Webster was born in New York City in 1936, the daughter of abstract expressionist painter Ethel Schwabacher and the prominent entertainment lawyer Wolf Schwabacher. Webster's memoir The Last Good Freudian recounts a privileged childhood that was deeply affected by her family's devotion to Freudian ideology. Webster herself entered psychoanalysis at age 14, but eventually rebelled against what she saw as the patriarchy of orthodox Freudianism.

Webster was educated at Swarthmore College, Barnard College, and Columbia University, and completed doctoral studies at the University of California, Berkeley. She has three children and five grandchildren, and splits her time between Berkeley and Rome. Her husband is Ira M. Lapidus, Professor Emeritus of History at the University of California, Berkeley and author of A History of Islamic Societies.

Writings

Brenda Webster is the author of five novels: Sins of the Mothers, Paradise Farm, The Beheading Game, Vienna Triangle, and After Auschwitz: A Love Story. Her memoir, The Last Good Freudian was published by Holmes and Meier in 2000. Webster also published a translation with Gabriella Romani of Edith Bruck's Holocaust novel, Lettera alla Madre in 2006.

Vienna Triangle, published in Fall of 2009, explores Sigmund Freud's role in the death of a brilliant disciple. Set in the late 1960s, Vienna Triangle follows Kate, a graduate student in psychology at Columbia, as she meets the famed Freudian theorist Helene Deutsch and learns about both the earliest days of psychoanalysis, and her own family's mysterious past.

Webster has also written two critical studies: "Yeats: A Psychoanalytic Study" and "Blake's Prophetic Psychology", which have appeared in several anthologies. She has also translated poetry from the Italian for The Other Voice and The Penguin Book of Women Poets. She is also the co-editor of Hungry for Light: The Journal of Ethel Schwabacher, and wrote the introduction to the Signet Classics edition of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.

In addition to her novels, translations, and academic books and essays, Webster is a prolific author of fictional short stories. Eleven of these stories were published in the collection Tattoo Bird, published online by FictionNet in 1996, as well as in various journals including Women's Studies, The Chariton Review, Caprice and other literary publications.

Awards

Brenda Webster has been nominated for two Northern California Book Awards (2007).

  • Fiction: The Beheading Game by Brenda Webster.
  • Translation: Letter to My Mother by Edith Bruck, translated by Brenda Webster.
  • Her short story Tattoo Bird received an Honorable Mention (second prize) in the H.E. Francis Short Story Competition held by the Ruth Hindman Foundation. It was also twice nominated for a Pushcart Prize.

    References

    Brenda Webster Wikipedia