Sounds from the Bell Jar: Ten Psychotic AuthorsAre madness and creativity related? Two literary scholars and a psychologist bring a blend of professional skills to bear on this question, first reviewing the contemporary scientific evidence and then examining the lives and works of ten authors, dating from the Middle Ages to the 20th century, who demonstrably suffered from a psychotic illness. For its material the book draws extensively on the subjects' own written words to illustrate the intimate connection that existed between the authors' creative expression and what they felt and perceived as psychotic persons. |
Other editions - View all
Sounds from the Bell Jar: Ten Psychotic Authors Gordon Claridge,Ruth Pryor,Gwen Watkins No preview available - 2014 |
Common terms and phrases
A. C. Benson Antonia White Arthur Arthur Benson asylum authors autism became began behaviour Bell Jar Benson brain breakdown certainly child Clare clinical continually Cowper creativity and psychosis daughter death delusions depression described despair diagnosed diary disorder dreams emotional evidence example experience father fear feeling felt friends genetic genius hallucinations Hayley Helpston Hoccleve Hoccleve's husband ideas individuals insanity John John Clare journal Jubilate Agno Kempe Lady Hesketh later letters live London look madness manic manic-depression Margery Margery Kempe married Mary mental illness mind mirror mood mother nature never Newton nightmares normal Olney Olney Hymns paranoid parents personality Plath poems poet psychiatric psychological published recognised Ruskin SADS-L says schizophrenia schizotypal seems sense sexual showed skinlessness Smart subjects suffered suicide Sylvia Sylvia Plath symptoms things thinking Thomas Hoccleve thought tion traits Unwin verse Virginia Virginia Woolf Woolf writing wrote