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Flight of the Mind Virginia Woolf's Art and Manic-Depressive Illness

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ISBN-10: 0520205049

ISBN-13: 9780520205048

Edition: 1994

Authors: Thomas C. Caramagno, Kay Redfield Jamison

List price: $39.95
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In this major new book on Virginia Woolf, Caramagno contends psychobiography has much to gain from a closer engagement with science. Literary studies of Woolf's life have been written almost exclusively from a psychoanalytic perspective. They portray Woolf as a victim of the Freudian "family romance," reducing her art to a neurotic evasion of a traumatic childhood. But current knowledge about manic-depressive illness--its genetic transmission, its biochemistry, and its effect on brain function--reveals a new relationship between Woolf's art and her illness. Caramagno demonstrates how Woolf used her illness intelligently and creatively in her theories of fiction, of mental functioning, and…    
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Book details

List price: $39.95
Copyright year: 1994
Publisher: University of California Press
Publication date: 2/29/1996
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 362
Size: 6.00" wide x 9.00" long x 1.00" tall
Weight: 1.100
Language: English

Clinical psychologist Kay Redfield Jamison was born on June 22, 1946. She received a B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. from the University of California, Los Angeles. She is considered one of the foremost experts on bipolar disorder, which she has had since her early adulthood. She is Professor of Psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and a Honorary Professor of English at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. She is the author of numerous books including An Unquiet Mind: A Memoir of Moods and Madness; Night Falls Fast: Understanding Suicide; and Touched with Fire: Manic-Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament.

List of Figures and Illustrations
Introduction
"I Owned to Great Egotism" : The Neurotic Model in Woolf Criticism
"Never Was Anyone So Tossed Up and Down by the Body As I Am": The Symptoms of Manic-Depressive Illness
"But What Is the Meaning of 'Explained' It? Countertransference and Modernism
"In Casting Accounts, Never Forget to Begin with the State of the Body": Genetics and the Stephen Family Line
"How Completely He Satisfied Her Is Proved by the Collapse": Emblematic Events in Family History
"How Immense Must Be the Force of Life": The Art of Autobiography and Woolf's Bipolar Theory of Being
"A Novel Devoted to Influenza": Reading without Resolution in The Voyage Out
"Does Anybody Know Mr. Flanders?" Bipolar Cognition and Syncretistic Vision in Jacob's Room
"The Sane and the Insane, Side by Side": The Object-Relations of Self-Management in Mrs. Dalloway
"It Is Finished": Ambivalence Resolved, Self Restored in To the Lighthouse
"I Do Not Know Altogether Who I Am": The Plurality of Intrasubjective Life in The Waves
Epilogue: Science and Subjectivity
Afterword, Kay Redfield Jamison
Appendix: Virginia Woolf's Mood Swing Chart (1895-1941)
Notes
Works Cited
Index