Madness And Modernism: Insanity In The Light Of Modern Art, Literature, And ThoughtBasic Books, 27 okt 1992 - 608 pagina's "A stunning revelation of the eerie likeness between schizophrenic insanity and the sensibility of modern art, literature, and thought, Madness and Modernism presents a vivid and highly original portrait of the world of the madman, along with a provocative commentary on modernist and postmodernist culture. Sass, a clinical psychologist, explores the bizarre experiences of schizophrenia (and related conditions) through a comparison with the works of various artists and writers, including Franz Kafka, Paul Valery, Samuel Beckett, Alain Robbe-Grillet, Giorgio de Chirico, and Marcel Duchamp, and by considering the ideas of philosophers such as Friedrich Nietzsche, William James, Martin Heidegger, Michel Foucault, and Jacques Derrida." "The similarities between madness and modernism are striking: defiance of authority and convention; an extreme, often dizzying relativism, which can culminate in paralysis; nihilism and all-embracing irony; a tantalizing, uncanny, but always frustrating sense of revelation; obliteration of standard forms of time and narrative; pervasive dehumanization; and disappearance of external reality in favor of the omnipotent ego or, alternatively, dissolution of all sense of selfhood." "This rigorously argued, gracefully written book offers a startlingly new vision of schizophrenia, an illness long recognized as the greatest challenge to psychiatric or psychological understanding. Conventionally seen as a loss of rationality, perhaps involving a return to some infantile or bestial condition, schizophrenia, according to Sass, is better understood as, in a sense, a disease of hyperrationality, with detachment from action, emotions, and the body and entrapment in forms of acute self-consciousness and heightened awareness. Sass refuses to romanticize the schizophrenic as a heroic rebel, mystic, or passionate Wildman, arguing instead that this condition echoes many of the most alienating aspects of modern life. In an epilogue and appendix, he considers whether modern culture might actively contribute to the genesis or shaping of schizophrenic forms of pathology, and he discusses the possible role of abnormalities of the brain."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Madness and Modernism: Insanity in the Light of Modern Art, Literature, and ... Louis Arnorsson Sass Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 1992 |
Madness and Modernism: Insanity in the Light of Modern Art, Literature, and ... Louis Arnorsson Sass Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2017 |
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abnormalities abstract activity alienation aspects awareness Bleuler Books brain British Journal cerebral chapter characteristic Chicago cognitive COGNITIVE SLIPPAGE concept consciousness culture delusional delusions Dementia Praecox described discussion emotional Eugen Bleuler everything example existence experience external fact feeling forms Foucault FULL-BLOWN PSYCHOSIS functioning hallucinations human hyperreflexivity Ibid influencing machine inner insanity International Universities Press interpretation Interpretation of Schizophrenia introspection involve Jaspers Journal of Psychiatry Kafka Karl Jaspers kind language London machine madness mental mind modern modernist modes nature nerves neurobiological Nietzsche normal NOTES TO PAGES objects one's ontological PARADOXES perception person phenomena Phenomenology philosophical phrenic postmodernism primitive processes psychoanalytic Psychopathology psychosis psychotic quoted R. D. Laing rays reality reflection reflexive regression Robert Musil role schizo schizoid schizophre schizophrenic language schizophrenic patients Schreber seems self-consciousness sense social solipsism speech subjectivism suggests symptoms tendency theory things thinking thought tion trans unreal words York