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Edith and Stein
** Edith Stein
Edith Stein served as his personal assistant during his first few years in Freiburg, followed later by Martin Heidegger from 1920 to 1923.
Edith Stein was Husserl's student at Göttingen while she wrote her On the Problem of Empathy ( 1916 ).
Edith Stein, also Saint Teresia Benedicta of the Cross, informally also known as Saint Edith Stein ( born: October 12, 1891 – died: August 9, 1942 ), was a German Roman Catholic philosopher and nun, regarded as a martyr and saint of the Roman Catholic Church.
Although Edith Stein wished to enter the Carmel since 1922, she was detered from this by her spirtual leader, archabbot Raphael Walzer OSB who wished her to act in the world as a teacher and speaker for the education of women.
Edith Stein
Stein and her sister Rosa, also a convert, were captured and shipped to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where they are presumed to have been gassed on August 9, 1942 when Edith was 50.
Edith Stein and Maximilian Kolbe, stained glass by Alois Plum in Kassel.
Memorial to Edith Stein in Prague
Edith Stein in a relief by Heinrich Schreiber in the Roman Catholic church of Our Lady in Wittenberg
The philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre published a book in 2006 titled, Edith Stein: A Philosophical Prologue, 1913-1922, in which he contrasted Stein's living out of her own personal philosophy with Martin Heidegger, whose actions during the Nazi era according to MacIntyre suggested a " bifurcation of personality.
* Life in a Jewish Family: Her Unfinished Autobiographical Account, translated by Josephine Koeppel, 1986, from The Collected Works of Edith Stein, Volume One, ICS Publications
* On the Problem of Empathy, Translated by Waltraut Stein 1989, from The Collected Works of Edith Stein, Volume Three, ICS Publications
* The Science of the Cross, translated by Josephine Koeppel, The Collected Works of Edith Stein, Volume Six, 1983, 2002, 2011, ICS Publications
* Spirituality of the Christian Woman from The Collected Works of Edith Stein, Volume Two, Essays on Woman, 1987, ICS Publications
* Potency and Act, Studies Toward a Philosophy of Being Translated by Walter Redmond, from The Collected Works of Edith Stein, Volume Eleven, 1998, 2005, 2009, ICS Publications
* Institute of Philosophy Edith Stein
* Associazione Italiana Edith Stein onlus
* Essays by Edith Stein at Quotidiana. org
* Edith Stein on the Carmelite Tradition
* Letter of Saint Edith Stein to Pope Pius XI in 1933

Edith and wrote
" Bradbury's favorite writers growing up included Katherine Anne Porter, who wrote about the American South, Edith Wharton, and Jessamyn West.
Harrison wrote his autobiography, not once but twice ; his wife, Edith Ogden Harrison, was a well-known writer of children's books and fairy tales in the first two decades of the twentieth century.
The de Montfort story is the focus of the second part of The Brothers of Gwynedd Quartet by Edith Pargeter ( who also wrote as Ellis Peters ).
* Edith Summers Kelley-Canadian author, wrote Weeds ( 1923 ), novel about " an artistic tomboy in the rural hills of Kentucky, who struggles unsuccessfully to overcome the oppressive roles assigned to her as a woman "
The poet Edith Sitwell wrote " the horror of the beginning ... is unsurpassable.
Edith Wharton wrote The Age of Innocence ( 1920 ) at a villa near Hyères, winning the Pulitzer Prize for the novel ( the first woman to do so ).
Many of the writers of the day, such as Sherwood Anderson and Edith Wharton, wrote autobiographical articles about their first books and many artists now famous, such as Paul Landacre, Howard Cook, and Emil Ganso, provided original prints.
When he died in 1917 Edith wrote two poems Trädet i skogen (" The Tree in the Forest ") and Fragment av en stämning (" Fragment of a Mood ") which expresses her sorrow and conflicted memories of her time in Switzerland.
From the summer of 1920 on she abandoned her poetry until August 1922 ; during the autumn and winter she wrote her final poems, stimulated by the review Ultra ; the short-lived review, started by Elmer Diktonius, Hagar Olsson and other young writers, was the first publication in Finland to embrace literary modernism and it hailed Edith as a pioneering genius and printed her new poems.
During those years he also wrote the cantata, Sweet Freedom's Song, in 1965 ; the Fifth Symphony in 1976 ; a Piano Concerto in 1968, which was commissioned by the Powder River Foundation for the soloist Marjorie Mitchell ; a Saxophone Concerto in 1984 ; and the operas The Lady from Colorado in 1964, Claudia Leqare in 1977, Abelard and Heloise in 1981, Minutes till Midnight in 1982, and Roman Fever in 1993 ( based on the short story of the same name by Edith Wharton ).
The novels and stories, mostly humorous, of Edith Somerville and Violet Florence Martin ( who wrote together as Martin Ross ), are among the most accomplished products of Anglo-Irish literature, though written exclusively from the viewpoint of the " big house ".
However on the evening of his twenty-first birthday, Tolkien wrote a letter to Edith, who had since moved to Cheltenham.
In her autobiography Crowded Hours, Longworth wrote of Edith Carow, stating " That I was the child of another marriage was a simple fact and made a situation that had to be coped with, and Mother coped with it with a fairness and charm and intelligence which she has to a greater degree than almost any one else I know.
He also wrote the biographies Edith Sitwell ( 1952 ), Virginia Woolf and her World ( 1975 ), Thrown to the Woolfs ( 1978 ) and Rupert Brooke ( 1980 ).
" Edith Sitwell, for example, also wrote " I do not know when I have been so deeply, terribly moved.
For example, Edith Stein wrote in 1932, " egislative and administrative functions also require direct feminine collaboration.
Yalding was a favourite of Edith Nesbit, author of The Railway Children, who wrote in the 1920s: " The Medway just above the Anchor ( at Yalding, Kent ) is a river of dreams ... If you go to Yalding you may stay at the George and be comfortable in a little village that owns a haunted churchyard, a fine church, and one of the most beautiful bridges in Europe.
Edith Kramer ’ s starting point was art therapy work with children, which was documented among other groundbreaking literature, in the book, “ Art as Therapy with Children .” She also wrote Art Therapy in a Children's Community.
From September 1921 until September 1922, Bywaters was at sea, and during this time Edith Thompson wrote to him frequently.
In non-fiction, Lewis Broad wrote The Innocence of Edith Thompson: A Study in Old Bailey Justice in 1952.
Edith Pargeter, who under her pen name of Ellis Peters wrote the Brother Cadfael novels, went to school in Dawley.
Edith Sitwell () wrote that eccentricity is " often a kind of innocent pride ", also saying that geniuses and aristocrats are called eccentrics because " they are entirely unafraid of and uninfluenced by the opinions and vagaries of the crowd ".
* In 1935 Edith Morley wrote a biography of Henry Crabb Robinson, published by J. M.

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