Chamber of Maiden Thought

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A01=Margot Waddell
A01=Meg Harris Williams
aesthetic psychology
Albatross
Author_Margot Waddell
Author_Meg Harris Williams
Bridegroom's Door
capability
Category=DSA
Category=JMAF
clinical case studies
Consequitive Reasoning
country
Craggy Steep
Daniel Deronda
deities
Draw Back
eliot
emily
Emily Bronte
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
george
Immortality Ode
internal
Internal Deities
Lifted Veil
literary symbolism
literature and mind development
Lockwood's Dream
Maiden Thought
Mental Development
Mountain Mist
Mr Heathcliff
negative
Night Mare
object relations
Paradise Lost
Positive Emotional Tension
post-Kleinian analysis
psychoanalytic theory
Splendour Valley
Tuneless Numbers
unmapped
UNMAPPED COUNTRY
Vice Versa
Visionary Gleam
White Whale
Wordsworth's Theory

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415838894
  • Weight: 500g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Oct 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Literature is recognised as having significantly influenced the development of modern psychoanalytic thought. In recent years psychoanalysis has drawn increasingly on the literary and artistic traditions of western culture and moved away from its original medical–scientific context. Originally published in 1991 The Chamber of Maiden Thought (Keats's metaphor for 'the awakening of the thinking principle') is an original and revealing exploration of the seminal role of literature in forming the modern psychoanalytic model of the mind.
The crux of the 'post-Kleinian' psychoanalytic view of personality development lies in the internal relations between the self and the mind's 'objects'. Meg Harris Williams and Margot Waddell show that these relations have their origins in the drama of identifications which we can see played out metaphorically and figuratively in literature, which presents the self-creative process in aesthetic terms. They argue that psychoanalysis is a true child of literature rather than merely the interpreter or explainer of literature, illustrating this with some examples from clinical experience, but drawing above all on close scrutiny of the dynamic mental processes presented in the work of Shakespeare, Milton, the Romantic poets, Emily Bronte and George Eliot.
The Chamber of Maiden Thought will encourage psychoanalytic workers to respond to the influence of literature in exploring symbolic mental processes. By bringing psychoanalysis into creative conjunction with the arts, it enables practitioners to tap a cultural potential whose insights into the human mind are of immense value.

Williams, Meg Harris; Waddell, Margot

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