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Quiz about The Interpretation of Murder by Jed Rubenfeld
Quiz about The Interpretation of Murder by Jed Rubenfeld

"The Interpretation of Murder" by Jed Rubenfeld Quiz


The is a quiz based on a great book. Unusually intelligent, it keeps its reader hooked to the very end. I hope you enjoy the quiz.

A multiple-choice quiz by martinjudo. Estimated time: 5 mins.
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Author
martinjudo
Time
5 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
316,889
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
20
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
13 / 20
Plays
155
- -
Question 1 of 20
1. In 1909 Sigmund Freud visits New York, U.S.A., for the first and only time. Traveling with him is which esteemed colleague? Hint


Question 2 of 20
2. Which German steamship carried Freud, and friends, to America in 1909? Hint


Question 3 of 20
3. In an attempt to impress Freud, Younger relates the case of a girl, called Priscilla, who is referred to him due to an unexplained paralysis of one part of her body. Which part of her body was paralyzed? Hint


Question 4 of 20
4. What was the name of the Edith Wharton book that Nora Acton was taking to the park? Hint


Question 5 of 20
5. In 1849 a disturbance occurred at the Astor Place Opera House concerning a rendition of the Shakespearean play "Hamlet". What was the ill-advised response of the newly elected Mayor of New York to this disturbance? Hint


Question 6 of 20
6. Freud suffers from a rather embarrassing medical condition. What is it? Hint


Question 7 of 20
7. Which core piece of Freud's theory, based on a Greek story, does Younger have major objections to? Hint


Question 8 of 20
8. Mentioned in the story is the periodical "Psychoanalytical Yearbook". To whom did Freud give the position of Editor-in-chief? Hint


Question 9 of 20
9. Littlemore locates Betty in which insalubrious place? Hint


Question 10 of 20
10. Which famous murder is mentioned in this book? Hint


Question 11 of 20
11. Which Shakespearean soliloquy runs, like a thread, through the storyline? Hint


Question 12 of 20
12. Which Civil War hero, and New York politician, is the grandfather of one of the female victims? Hint


Question 13 of 20
13. Which bizarre knack of body control did Younger demonstrate in the lift shaft? Hint


Question 14 of 20
14. To escape the flooding shaft Littlemore and Younger are shot up the shaft in a pressurised cabin. What technique did they use to stop damage occurring to their lungs during the ascent? Hint


Question 15 of 20
15. Littlemore promises to return a certain article to the prostitute Greta. What was it that had been taken from Greta? Hint


Question 16 of 20
16. When Littlemore confronts Banwell he is threatened with which political figure? Hint


Question 17 of 20
17. Harry Thaw and Carl Jung were to meet in the Players' Club by accident. Whose name was used as an introduction? Hint


Question 18 of 20
18. Freud's visit to America was attacked by a group of powerful neurologists under which "nom de guerre"? Hint


Question 19 of 20
19. During his visit in America, where did Freud stay? Hint


Question 20 of 20
20. Nora Acton is based on a real patient of Dr. Freud. What was her real name? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. In 1909 Sigmund Freud visits New York, U.S.A., for the first and only time. Traveling with him is which esteemed colleague?

Answer: Carl Jung

Freud had been invited by G. Stanley Hall, President of Clark University, to give a series of lectures on the history of Psychoanalysis. In all Freud gave five lectures and was paid $714.60.
Spinoza is considered one of the great rationalists during the 17th century.
Jung is considered one of the founding fathers of 'Analytic Psychology'. He first met Freud in 1907 when they collaborated on the study of schizophrenia and he joined Freud on a visit to the U.S.A. in 1909.
Rene Descartes was a philosopher during the early half of the 18th century and has been called the "Father Of Modern Philosophy", his major opus 'Meditations on First Philosophy is a standard text in most universities.
Bertrand Russell was born in Wales and is known as a logician and philosopher who helped found 'Analytic Philosophy' with Frege and Wittgenstein
2. Which German steamship carried Freud, and friends, to America in 1909?

Answer: SS George Washington

The SS George Washington was built for the Bremen based North German Lloyd and was named after the first president of the United States. It was launched in 1908 as the largest built German steamship and the third largest steamship in the world. It could carry over 2,000 passengers in comfort and many celebrities, including Freud, sailed on her.

She is most well known for passing a particularly large iceberg, on 14th of April 1912, and radioing a warning to all ships in the area, including the Titanic, which sank later that night.
3. In an attempt to impress Freud, Younger relates the case of a girl, called Priscilla, who is referred to him due to an unexplained paralysis of one part of her body. Which part of her body was paralyzed?

Answer: Left hand

After Priscilla's older sister, Mary, dies of influenza, Priscilla is overcome with guilt and manifests a paralysis of her left hand - the same hand that she used to write letters acknowledging the condolences of friends and family. Her guilt stems from her wish to supplant her sister's role as wife and mother.
4. What was the name of the Edith Wharton book that Nora Acton was taking to the park?

Answer: The House of Mirth

Written by Edith Wharton in 1905, "The House of Mirth" is recognized as her first important piece of fiction writing.
Nora has a secret copy of this book which she takes to Gramercy Park which is across the road from where she lives.
Wharton went on to win the Pulitzer Prize for her novel "The Age of Innocence" in 1920. All book titles are novels by Edith Wharton.
5. In 1849 a disturbance occurred at the Astor Place Opera House concerning a rendition of the Shakespearean play "Hamlet". What was the ill-advised response of the newly elected Mayor of New York to this disturbance?

Answer: He called out the militia

There was a long standing feud between two Shakespearean actors, William Charles Macready (British) and Edwin Forrest (American). The feud started over a disagreement concerning the interpretation of the character of Hamlet - primarily whether the Prince should be played as a strong or weak character. Macready tended to prance round the stage, according to Forrest resulting in Forrest being driven from the stages in England. When Macready then toured America in 1849 he was pelted with rotten eggs, old shoes and coins.

The furor culminated in front of the Astor Place opera House where fifteen thousand rioters collected to disrupt Macready's performance. The rather green Mayor of New York panicked and called out the local militia. When order was finally restored between twenty to thirty men had died when the militia opened fire on the crowd.
6. Freud suffers from a rather embarrassing medical condition. What is it?

Answer: Enuresis

Enuresis is the inability to control urination and is normally prevalent in the very old or very young.
One particular scene describes how Freud urinated in his trousers when he was waylaid on his way to the bathroom. In a rather shameful lack of empathy Jung waylays Freud until Freud wets himself whereupon Jung creates an elaborate reason for the enuresis based on the fact that Freud is threatened by his protégé.
7. Which core piece of Freud's theory, based on a Greek story, does Younger have major objections to?

Answer: Electra Complex

The personality factors consist of the conscious, preconscious and subconscious mind. The conscious mind is what we pay attention with at the moment and therefore takes a large amount of our attention. The preconscious mind is those things that we are aware of but pay no attention to. The subconscious mind acts independently from the conscious mind and is responsible for most of our behaviour.
Transference occurs when a person takes the perceptions and expectations from one person and projects them onto another person. This can be paternal, maternal, sibling, or other transference.
Defense mechanisms result from conflict between the Ego, Superego, and the Id and can result in anxiety and tension.
One of the theories that Freud expounded was the Electra complex, i.e. that a daughter wishes to have sex with her father. Younger was skeptical about this theory, which Freud characterised as resistance.
8. Mentioned in the story is the periodical "Psychoanalytical Yearbook". To whom did Freud give the position of Editor-in-chief?

Answer: Jung

Jung was promoted to the position of Editor in chief by Freud over the misgivings of his Viennese disciples. Freud considered Jung to be his natural successor within the field of Psychoanalysis. The 'Yearbook' was the first periodical devoted to the new psychology.
9. Littlemore locates Betty in which insalubrious place?

Answer: Jefferson Market Jail

After finding work in a clothing factory Betty is arrested for quitting her job. The owners of the factory had sacked the previous workforce for striking and had brought in non-union labour to replace them. Betty refused to be seen as a scab and consequently quit.
Normally the jail was inhabited by streetwalkers and thieves.
All the other prisons existed within the city of New York.
10. Which famous murder is mentioned in this book?

Answer: The Stanford White Murder

On June 25 1906 Harry Thaw calmly walked up to, and shot, Stanford White on the rooftop garden of the old Madison Square Garden. White was a famous architect who enjoyed a libertine lifestyle, with a particular taste in young chorus girls.
The other three murders happened later on in history.
The Black Dahlia murder occurred in the September 1943.
William Desmond Taylor was a popular actor and director during the era of silent movies. He was shot and killed, in his bungalow, in February 1922.
Rev Edward W. Hall and Eleanor Mills were murdered in September 1922. Like Stanford White, Mills had been shot three times in the head. No-one was ever charged with this murder.
11. Which Shakespearean soliloquy runs, like a thread, through the storyline?

Answer: "To be or not to be"

"O that this too solid flesh would melt" and "To be or not to be" come from Hamlet.
The soliloquy "To Be ...", showing Hamlet deciding whether to act or not against the person who killed his father, is pondered on, and eventually dissected by, Younger. He hypothesises that for Hamlet "to be" will result in death whereas "... not to be" would mean that he would live. It is this conflict, within himself, that results in Shakespeare's most famous soliloquy.
"The raven himself is hoarse" and "Is this a dagger which I see before me" come from Macbeth.
12. Which Civil War hero, and New York politician, is the grandfather of one of the female victims?

Answer: General Franz Sigel

Younger confirms the identity of the girl found in the trunk whilst questioning Nora Acton. After being shown a photograph of Nora standing beside the victim and a Chinese man Nora confirmed that the girl was Elsie Sigel, granddaughter of General Franz Sigel.
General Sigel was a real person who had been born in Baden, Germany before emigrating to the USA in 1852. He was indeed a Civil War hero and was involved within New York politics; at one time he was pension agent for the city of New York after being appointed by President Cleveland.
13. Which bizarre knack of body control did Younger demonstrate in the lift shaft?

Answer: Control of the inner ear

During the trip down the shaft Younger controls the muscles within his inner ear to open the Eustachian tube to release the pressure build up as a result of the descent. Another way of doing this is to pinch your nose and blow out.
14. To escape the flooding shaft Littlemore and Younger are shot up the shaft in a pressurised cabin. What technique did they use to stop damage occurring to their lungs during the ascent?

Answer: Yelling

After retrieving the trunk from the window Littlemore and Younger find themselves in a pressurised cabin in a shaft that was filling with water. To stop themselves from exploding their lungs during the rapid ascent they had to yell continuously until they reached the surface.
15. Littlemore promises to return a certain article to the prostitute Greta. What was it that had been taken from Greta?

Answer: Her baby

Detective Littlemore returned to the brothel on Fortieth Street to re-interview Mrs Merrill's girls about the whereabouts of Harry Thaw. He interviewed Greta who informed him that her baby had been removed by Mrs Merrill and placed in a family in Hell's Kitchen. Also Greta is being docked three dollars a week for the care of the baby. All this was done without the consent of the poor girl Greta.
16. When Littlemore confronts Banwell he is threatened with which political figure?

Answer: Mayor of New York

During a second attempt to kill Nora Acton, George Banwell is trapped and arrested with the help of Littlemore's paramour Betty Longobardi. Banwell had been able to access Nora's room by way of a secret passageway behind a wall panel near the hearth. In an attempt to pressure Littlemore to let him go Banwell states that he had the Mayor of New York in his power, whereupon the Mayor, McClellan, appears and confronts Banwell.
17. Harry Thaw and Carl Jung were to meet in the Players' Club by accident. Whose name was used as an introduction?

Answer: Smith Jelliffe

Harry Thaw entered the Players' Club through the rear door, and gave his name as Monroe Reid. He took special delight in visiting the building that had been designed by Stanford White, whom he had murdered three years previously. He meets Carl Jung in the ballroom, becoming acquainted after Jung mentions the name of Smith Jelliffe. Jelliffe is Thaw's psychiatrist.
18. Freud's visit to America was attacked by a group of powerful neurologists under which "nom de guerre"?

Answer: The Triumvirate

The Triumvirate consisted of Charles Loomis Dana, Bernard Sachs, and M. Allen Starr. They were the three most powerful neurologists in the country. They believed that all nervous diseases result from neurological problems and not psychological causes. They considered psychoanalysis, and Freud in particular, a threat to their livelihoods.
The Order of the Skull and Bones is a Yale University society.
Opus Dei is an organisation belonging to the Catholic Church.
The Rosicrucians are believed to have been created by a group of German Protestants.
19. During his visit in America, where did Freud stay?

Answer: Hotel Manhattan

Freud had stayed for a week at the Hotel Manhattan during his visit to New York City in 1909. He later went to Clark University to deliver a series of lectures on psychoanalysis.
The Waldorf Astoria was actually two hotels built on the site that now houses the Empire State building. The Waldorf Hotel was built in 1893 with the Astoria opening in 1897 making the combined hotel the largest hotel in the world at that time.
The Astor House Hotel was actually built in Shanghai and is known as the first western hotel to be established in China. It has existed in the city of Shanghai since 1858. It is now a backpackers hostel and is called the Pujiang, becoming the first Shanghai member of the International Youth Hostel Federation in 1998.
The Hotel Knickerbocker was erected in 1906 on the southeast corner of ND Street. It was built by John Jacob Astor and was the long time residence of Enrico Caruso.
20. Nora Acton is based on a real patient of Dr. Freud. What was her real name?

Answer: Ida Bauer

Freud wrote a famous case study about one of his patients whom he named Dora, after his sister's nursemaid. Her real name was Ida Bauer and she suffered from a form of hysteria called Aphonia, otherwise known as loss of speech.
The other names are characters in the book.
Source: Author martinjudo

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