Poet's Voice in the Making of Mind

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A01=Russell Meares
Australian Aboriginal Culture
Author_Russell Meares
Autobiographical Memory
Blind Baby
Blind Children
Category=JMS
Chronic
Dark Lady
Deaf Children
Disconnected
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Face To Face
Follow
Higher Order Consciousness
Homo Erectus
Homo Habilis
Making
Mandelbrot Set
Match Mismatch Process
Mind
Mythological Thought
Narcissus Pseudonarcissus
Pictured Movement
Poet's
Sighted Child
Symbolic Play
Timeless
Totemic Operator
Vice Versa
Voice
Wandering
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415572347
  • Weight: 440g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Mar 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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How did the human mind evolve and how does it emerge, again and again, in individual lives?

In The Poet’s Voice in the Making of Mind, Russell Meares presents a fascinating inquiry into the origin of mind. He proposes that the way in which mind, or self, evolved, may resemble the way it emerges in childhood play and that a poetic, analogical style of thought is a biological necessity, essential to bringing to fruition the achievement of the human mind. Taking a fresh look at the language used in psychotherapy, he shows how language, and conversation in particular, is central to the development and maintenance of self. His theory incorporates the ideas from William James, Hughlings, Jackson, Janet, Hobson, Gerald Edelman, Wolf Singer, Vygotsky and others. It is illuminated by extracts from literary artists such as Wallace Stevens, W.S. Merwin, Virginia Woolf, Joseph Conrad and Shakespeare.

Encompassing psychotherapy; psychoanalysis; evolution; child development; literary criticism; philosophy; studies of mind and consciousness, The Poet’s Voice in the Making of Mind is an engaging, ground-breaking and thought-provoking work that will appeal to psychotherapists and psychoanalysts, as well as anyone interested in the emergence of mind and self.

Russell Meares is Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Sydney. He trained in psychiatry at the Royal Bethlem and Maudsley Hospitals, where he formed an enduring friendship with the late Robert Hobson, with whom he collaborated to develop the Conversational Model of psychotherapy, devised to treat people who could not be treated by other means and who would now be called "borderline." His most recent books for Routledge include are Intimacy and Alienation (2000) and The Metaphor of Play (revised and enlarged edition) (2005)

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