
Creative Characters
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A termék adatai:
- Kiadás sorszáma 1
- Kiadó Routledge
- Megjelenés dátuma 2025. szeptember 1.
- ISBN 9781041086611
- Kötéstípus Keménykötés
- Terjedelem278 oldal
- Méret 234x156 mm
- Súly 670 g
- Nyelv angol 700
Kategóriák
Rövid leírás:
In Creative Characters, originally published in 1991, Elisabeth Young-Bruehl reflects on the long search for an understanding of creativity and offers a novel approach. She notes that studies of creativity fall into types. She offers an original analysis of creativity based on a theory of character.
TöbbHosszú leírás:
The study of creativity is as old as western thought. In recent times any crisis of confidence is likely to involve anxiety about the loss of creativity – scientific, artistic, technological – and to set off a new search for creativity’s definition.
In Creative Characters, originally published in 1991, Elisabeth Young-Bruehl reflects on the long search for an understanding of creativity and offers a novel approach. She notes that studies of creativity fall into types. Some look at the act of creation, others focus on the creators, while others stress the conscious or unconscious motivations of creative people. All these approaches share certain limitations. They lack an integrative perspective and they search for a common denominator – one definition of the creative process, a single creative type – which obscures the diversity of creative people and their work.
Young-Bruehl here offers an original analysis of creativity based on a theory of character. Creative people, she argues, create in the medium of their characters. They develop (usually unconsciously) an image of their characters or, in other terms, an ideal for the organization of their minds and lives, which they both aspire to and project into whatever they create. This character-ideal appears in their works, their social visions, their philosophies of nature, and also their understandings of creative processes, their own and others’. What creative people wish for themselves, is what they wish for in their lives and works.
Young-Bruehl suggests that there are three broad character and creative types, each comprised of many variations. She displays these ways of getting one’s psychic act together or getting a product together by turning to three ancient Greek theorists of creativity – Plato, Aristotle, and Zeno – and three modern theorists – Nietzsche, Freud, and Proust. She then proceeds by clustering biographical vignettes and portraits of ideas in which she can show – rather than try to define – the creativity as well as the character ideal she has in mind.
Of special interest to Young-Bruehl is what individuals say about their own creativity, especially when creativity is not explicitly their topic. Her approach is primarily psychoanalytic, but she also uses philosophical analysis, literary criticism, history of science, and biography.
Psychoanalysts and psychologists will find the book not only a new approach to creativity, but a new way of doing applied psychoanalysis: there have been many psychobiographies but no effort has been made to survey them and draw conclusions. Philosophers will discover a major contribution to the theory of character, one of the most neglected subfields of philosophy. Finally in Creative Characters biography readers will see how the study of individual lives can lead to reflection on larger questions.
TöbbTartalomjegyzék:
Preface. Introduction. 1. Characterology and Creativity 2. Creative Characters on Their Characters 3. Comparative Character-Ideals 4. Illustrations, in Three Manners 5. Character-Ideals and Libidinal Types 6. Developmental Stories 7. Six Characters in Three Types 8. Art and Mental Illness and Theories of Creativity 9. Gender Questions, Socio-Cultural Contexts. Bibliographic Notes. Index.
Több