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Touched with Fire: Manic-Depressive Illness and The Artistic Temperament » (Reissue)

Book cover image of Touched with Fire: Manic-Depressive Illness and The Artistic Temperament by Kay Redfield Jamison

Authors: Kay Redfield Jamison, Kay Redfield Jamison
ISBN-13: 9780684831831, ISBN-10: 068483183X
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Date Published: October 1996
Edition: Reissue

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Author Biography: Kay Redfield Jamison

Book Synopsis

The anguished, volatile intensity we associate with the artistic temperament, often described as "a fine madness," has been thought of as a defining aspect of much artistic genius. Now, Kay Jamison's brilliant work, based on years of studies as a clinical psychologist and prominent researcher in mood disorders, reveals that many artists who were subject to alternatingly exultant and then melancholic moods were, in fact, engaged in a lifelong struggle with manic-depressive illness. Drawing on extraordinary recent advances in genetics, neuroscience, and psychopharmacology, Jamison presents the now incontrovertible proof of the biological foundations of this frequently misunderstood disease, and applies what is known about the illness, and its closely related temperaments, to the lives of some of the world's greatest artists - Byron, van Gogh, Shelley, Poe, Melville, Schumann, Coleridge, Virginia Woolf, Burns, and many others. Byron's life, discussed in considerable detail, is used as a particularly fascinating example of the complex interaction among heredity, mood, temperament, and poetic work. Jamison reviews the substantial, rapidly accumulating, and remarkably consistent findings from biographic and scientific studies that demonstrate a markedly increased rate of severe mood disorders and suicide in artists, writers, and composers. She then discusses reasons why this link between mania, depression, and artistic creativity might exist. Manic-depressive illness, a surprisingly common disease, is genetically transmitted. For the first time, the extensive family histories of psychiatric illness and suicide in many writers, artists, and composers are presented. In some instances - for example, Tennyson and Byron - these psychiatric pedigrees are traced back more than 150 years. Jamison discusses the complex ethical and cultural consequences of recent research in genetics, especially as they apply to manic-depressive illness, a disease that almost certainly confers

Publishers Weekly

Drawing from the lives of artists such as Van Gogh, Byron and Virginia Woolf, Jamison examines the links between manic-depression and creativity. (Oct.)

Table of Contents

1That Fine Madness: Introduction1
2Endless Night, Fierce Fires and Shramming Cold: Manic-Depressive Illness11
3Could It Be Madness - This? Controversy and Evidence49
4Their Life a Storm Whereon They Ride: Temperament and Imagination101
5The Mind's Canker in Its Savage Mood: George Gordon, Lord Byron149
6Genealogies of These High Mortal Miseries: The Inheritance of Manic-Depressive Illness191
7This Net Throwne Upon the Heavens: Medicine and the Arts239
App. A. Diagnostic Criteria for the Major Mood Disorders261
App. B. Writers, Artists, and Composers with Probable Cyclothymia, Major Depression, or Manic-Depressive Illness267
Notes271
Acknowledgments355
Index359

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