https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1ttczXQMm9ICi1VQasKOJuNTGeLFC1-D9?usp=sharing
see also
The first starting point of the book was my reading— decades ago now— of Sándor Ferenczi’s Thalassa: A Theory of Genitality (1924). That remarkable book expanded Freudian psychoanalytic theory in the direction of what Ferenczi called bioanalysis. I was gripped by the main theme of bioanalysis, which is what Ferenczi called “the thalassic regressive undertow.” By that he meant that the sea, celebrated by poets and scientists alike as the original site and source of life, eventually draws all life back to itself. (kindle location 44-48)
On the way to Leukothea, the present book visits some early Greek thinkers who are joined by Hölderlin and Nietzsche, Goethe, Schelling and Hegel, Melville and Woolf, along with the psychoanalyst Sándor Ferenczi. (kindle location 263-264)
Krell, David Farrell. The Sea. Bloomsbury Publishing. 2019, Kindle edition.
how interesting, SF must have a belly laugh, when he sees this one (2019-4-4)