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In Search of Lost Time, Volume VI_ Time Regained - Marcel Proust [321]

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homosexuality, male and female, related to specific individuals, see the Index of Characters under Albertine; Andrée; Argencourt; Bernard, Nissim; Bloch’s sister(s) and cousin(s); Cambremer, Leonor; Charlus; Châtellerault; Foix; Gilberte; Guermantes, Prince de; Jupien; LEA; Legrandin; LEVY, Esther; Morel; Odette; Saint-Loup; Théodore; Vaugoubert; Vinteuil, Mlle).

JEALOUSY. Swann’s jealousy: I 385–457 passim, 505–43 passim. Inquiries of the jealous lover compared to the researches of the scholar: 388–90, 445. Jealousy compared to physical pain: 391. Jealousy as it were the shadow of love: 392. Jealousy composed of an infinity of different, ephemeral jealousies: 529. Swann’s jealousy in retrospect; “that lamentable and contradictory excrescence of his love” revives for another woman: II 130–34. A certain kind of sensual music the most merciless of hells for the jealous lover: 534–35. Saint-Loup’s jealousy of Rachel: III 157–61, 217–24, 223–43, 476–77. Jealousy cannot contain many more ingredients than other products of the imagination; it outlives love: 476. Jealousy among inverts: IV 29–31 (see also V 283). Swann speaks of his jealousy to M: 139. Jealousy a resource that never fails: 270–71. “Jealousy belonging to that family of morbid doubts which are eliminated by the vigour of an affirmation far more surely than by its probability”: 314–15. “Every impulse of jealousy is unique and bears the imprint of the creature … who has aroused it”: 708. Arbitrary localisation of jealousy: 709–10. M’s jealousy: V 16–30, 63–252 passim; 445–585 passim; retrospective jealousy: 563–752 passim. An intermittent and capricious disease: 28–30 quickly detected, and regarded, by the person who is its object, as justifying deception:73–74, 111–12. Delayed-action jealousy: 106–7. Jealousy a form of tyranny: 112–13. “The demands of our jealousy and the blindness of our credulity are greater than the woman we love could ever suppose”: 119. “Revolving searchlights” of jealousy; “a demon that cannot be exorcised”: 129. Jealousy may perish for want of nourishment: 131–32. Jealousy like a historian without documents, “thrashes around in the void”: 188–89. Jealousy is “blindfold;” like the torture of the Danaides or Ixion: 195. A social form of jealousy (Mme Verdurin): 370–71. Blind ignorance of the jealous lover: 400–1. Albertine on M’s jealousy: 445–47. Jealousy lacks imagination: 585. For jealousy there can be neither past nor future, but invariably the present: 662. To the jealous man reality a “dizzy kaleidoscope”: 699–700. Retrospective jealousy proceeds from the same optical error as the desire for posthumous fame: 701. In jealousy we choose our own sufferings: 735. Retrospective jealousy a physical disease: 872–73. “Jealousy is a good recruiting-sergeant”: VI 338.

JEWS. M’s grandfather distrusts M’s Jewish friends (Bloch): I 125–26. Mme de Gallardon on Swann’s Jewishness: 475–77. Swann illustrates all the successive stages in social behaviour through which the Jews have passed: II 2–3. Jews in society: 122–24, 127. A brothel-keeper offers M a Jewess as a special treat (Rachel): 206–7. Bloch affects anti-semitism: 433–34 (cf. 442, 445–46; III 334). Jewish colony at Balbec: 433–35. The Bloch family: 474–87. Albertine’s anti-semitism: 629, 659 (cf. III 487). Mater Semita: III 237 (cf. 321–22). Jews in a French drawing-room; racial atavism: 253–55. The “Syndicate”: 319 (cf. IV 132). Mme de Marsantes’s anti-semitism: 342, 346 (cf. 217, 237). Charlus and the Blochs: 389–93. Mme Sazerat both Dreyfusist and anti-Semitic: 392. Jewishness and Dreyfusism (Reinach and Bloch): 402–3. Reflections on Jews in a Paris restaurant: 559–60. Swann returns to “the spiritual fold of his fathers”: 796. Jews compared with inverts: IV 21–22. M. de Guermantes on the Jews: 105. Swann’s Jewishness; “certain Jews, men of great refinement and delicacy, in whom there remain in reserve … a cad and a prophet”: 122; “that stout Jewish race”: 141–42. Charlus’s tirade against the Jews: 687–91. Jews discussed by the Duc and Duchesse de Guermantes: V 45–46. Morel’s anti-semitism,

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