Uses the figure of the mad poet to explore the connections between madness and creativity.
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"No one intending to think or write on Plato, Hoelderlin, or Nietzsche can afford to do so without a knowledge of Weineck's chapters." -- Stanley Corngold, author of "Complex Pleasure: Forms of Feeling in German Literature"
"Absolutely fascinating on every page. One learns from Weineck's way of putting things as well as from the points themselves." -- John McCumber, author of "Poetic Interaction: Language, Freedom, Reason"
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