Signifying Pain: Constructing and Healing the Self through WritingState University of New York Press, 1 thg 2, 2012 - 320 trang A deeply personal yet universal work, Signifying Pain applies the principles of therapeutic writing to such painful life experiences as mental illness, suicide, racism, domestic abuse, and even genocide. Probing deep into the bedrock of literary imagination, Judith Harris traces the odyssey of a diverse group of writers—John Keats, Derek Walcott, Jane Kenyon, Michael S. Harper, Robert Lowell, and Ai, as well as student writers—who have used their writing to work through and past such personal traumas. Drawing on her own experience as a poet and teacher, Harris shows how the process can be long and arduous, but that when exercised within the spirit of one's own personal compassion, the results can be limitless. Signifying Pain will be of interest not only to teachers of creative and therapeutic writing, but also to those with a critical interest in autobiographical or confessional writing more generally. |
Nội dung
1 | |
Speaking Pain Women Psychoanalysis and Writing | 17 |
Soulmaking Conflict and the Construction of Identity | 107 |
Healing Pain Acts of Theraputic Writing | 175 |
Notes | 259 |
281 | |
291 | |
Ấn bản in khác - Xem tất cả
Signifying Pain: Constructing and Healing the Self through Writing Judith Harris Xem trước bị giới hạn - 2003 |
Signifying Pain: Constructing and Healing the Self through Writing Judith Harris Không có bản xem trước - 2003 |
Thuật ngữ và cụm từ thông dụng
abuse analysis Anne Sexton becomes begins Berman body Bracher Charcot child childhood Cimabue composition confession confessional poetry consciousness creative writing Cupid daughter dead death Derek Walcott desire Dora Dora’s dramatic monologue dream emotions experience expression fact fantasy father feelings female Freud Freudian Gilman Giotto God’s guilt Harper healing human hysteria Ibid identity imagination intentionally left blank Jane Kenyon Keats Keats’s Kenyon Lacan Lady Lazarus language literary Lowell Lowell’s Mary Shelley’s McCarriston means memory mental mind mirror mother mourning myth narrative narrator narrator’s object Ode to Psyche one’s pain past patient personal writing Plath poem poet poet’s political psychic psychoanalysis reader reality repressed reveals sense Sexton sexual shame signifying silence social soul speak speaker story suffering suggests survivor symbolic symptoms Talking Cure teacher therapeutic therapy things tion trauma uncon unconscious victim voice Walcott woman women words Yellow Wallpaper