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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Informative, insightful..., February 21, 2008
This review is from: The Artist and the Emotional World (Paperback)
The Artist and the Emotional World is an insightful and informative text. Written by psychoanalyst John Gedo, the book establishes the necessary framework for a comprehensive study of the connection between creativity and psychiatric illness. Gedo's examination opens with a chapter about something I originally considered to be something of a busy-work tactic - the dissection of the structure of creativity. After consideration however, I came to realize that a clear illustration of the creativity as an organism needed to be established before in-depth dialogue could take place. The analysis Gedo offers provides a common-ground jumping point from which to begin the examination. Most effective among his hypotheses is his adoption of the George Klein model of "vital pleasures" which are considered to motivate all sentient beings. Klein called one of these pleasures "effectance" and defined it as "the joy to be had through the sheer exercise of competence." (Gedo, 9) Gedo takes the Klein model further by noting that his clinical experiences had shown that accomplishment drew patients further into continued expression which relieved certain of the negative stimuli demonstrated in psychosis. From this experience Gedo determined that the mentally ill artist who received relief from pressing psychological conflict and an increase in happiness (no matter the duration or intensity) experienced an increase in self-esteem. The significance of such an effect can be seen against the relief of discrimination and misunderstanding that accompanies a cultural world-view of psychic illness, its causes and the persons who must wade through its challenges.

I did not anticipate enjoying this book at the outset and was happily through more than 132 pages before I realized I didn't hate it. I have been given a clearer understanding of exactly what it is I am searching for - a deeper relationship with creativity rather than a concise definition of it.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars About This Book..., March 20, 2010
Hardback: quartercloth over boards, issued without dustjacket, 255 pp, illustrated.

Index. 19 pp of End Notes.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Part I: Psychology of Creativity
Creativity and its Psychoanalytic Conceptualizations
The Creative Personality: A Portrait

Part II: The Development of a Creative Gift
What is Bred in the Bone
The Burdens of Talent
The Nurturant Matrix

Part III: The Struggles of a Creative Life
The Price of Commitment
Creativity and Self-Healing
Creativity and Psychopathology
The Frustration of Lying Fallow
Psychosis and the Art of Inner Necessity
When the Wind is Southerly

Part IV: Talent and Opportunity
The Psychology of Performance
Anticlassical Insurgency
A Personality Type Who Can Seize the Day
Paul Cezanne

Conclusions
The Artist's Emotional World
Eugene Delacroix as Prototype
Psychoanalytic Contributions to Creativity Studies
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The Artist and the Emotional World
The Artist and the Emotional World by John E. Gedo (Paperback - April 15, 1996)
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