Mind-forg'd Manacles

Mind-forg'd Manacles
Author: Joan Baum
Publisher: Archon Books
Total Pages: 296
Release: 1994
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN:

Most simply, the Romantic poets came to recognize political solutions as inevitable failures, and political poetry as not poetry at all, but versified propaganda that does not endure beyond timely or contemporary events and that cannot explore motives of deeper significance about the human condition. Meanwhile, radicals viewed concern for black slaves as a fanciful distraction obfuscating wage slavery, the oppression of the English working class, and the hellish life of the laboring masses during the Industrial Revolution. Following the Abolition of the Slave Trade (1807) the plight of the fettered African slaves in the West Indies faded into the larger concern over the "enslaved" masses in England.

Mind-forg'd Manacles

Mind-forg'd Manacles
Author: David Bindman
Publisher: Hayward Gallery Publishing
Total Pages: 152
Release: 2007
Genre: Art
ISBN:

For William Blake, the idea of slavery was fundamental to his art and writing. Containing over 60 reproductions from Blake's illuminated books, watercolours and engravings, this book includes essays by curator and leading Blake scholar David Bindman, and novelist and literary critic Darryl Pinckney.

Mind-forg'd Manacles

Mind-forg'd Manacles
Author: Roy Porter
Publisher: Burns & Oates
Total Pages: 408
Release: 1987
Genre: History
ISBN:

This book is an exploration of the attitudes towards, and treatments for, madness in the age before the mass asylum and the emergence of the psychiatric profession.

Songs of Innocence

Songs of Innocence
Author: William Blake
Publisher:
Total Pages: 35
Release: 1789
Genre: Illumination of books and manuscripts
ISBN:

Poetry and Psychoanalysis

Poetry and Psychoanalysis
Author: David Shaddock
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2020-05-18
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 1000071332

Poetry and Psychoanalysis: The Opening of the Field provides a guide to applying a poet’s imagination and precision of language to the healing endeavours of psychoanalysis while making a lucid journey through 2,000 years of transformative poetry from Virgil, Dante and Blake to the contemporary poet Claudia Rankine. Patients enter treatment with the hope of being recognized and the hope for transformation of a painful experience. David Shaddock shows how poetry can guide psychoanalysts towards meeting that hope. The book is based on the proposition that an accurate recognition of what is leads to the opening of what could be. The imaginative space that opens between poem and reader or therapist and patient can be a place of healing and transformation. Poetry and Psychoanalysis will appeal to psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists interested in using literature and creativity as inspiration for both their clinical work and personal growth, as well as all who love poetry.

Poems

Poems
Author: William Blake
Publisher: Vintage
Total Pages: 194
Release: 2016-12-13
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 1101973145

William Blake is one of England’s most fascinating writers; he was not only a groundbreaking poet, but also a painter, engraver, radical, and mystic. Although Blake was dismissed as an eccentric by his contemporaries, his powerful and richly symbolic poetry has been a fertile source of inspiration to the many writers and artists who have followed in his footsteps. In this collection Patti Smith brings together her personal favorites of Blake’s poems, including the complete Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience, to give a singular picture of this unique genius, whom she calls in her moving introduction “the spiritual ancestor” of generations of poets.

Eternity's Sunrise

Eternity's Sunrise
Author: Leo Damrosch
Publisher: Yale University Press
Total Pages: 377
Release: 2015-10-28
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0300216297

William Blake, overlooked in his time, remains an enigmatic figure to contemporary readers despite his near canonical status. Out of a wounding sense of alienation and dividedness he created a profoundly original symbolic language, in which words and images unite in a unique interpretation of self and society. He was a counterculture prophet whose art still challenges us to think afresh about almost every aspect of experience—social, political, philosophical, religious, erotic, and aesthetic. He believed that we live in the midst of Eternity here and now, and that if we could open our consciousness to the fullness of being, it would be like experiencing a sunrise that never ends. Following Blake’s life from beginning to end, acclaimed biographer Leo Damrosch draws extensively on Blake’s poems, his paintings, and his etchings and engravings to offer this generously illustrated account of Blake the man and his vision of our world. The author’s goal is to inspire the reader with the passion he has for his subject, achieving the imaginative response that Blake himself sought to excite. The book is an invitation to understanding and enjoyment, an invitation to appreciate Blake’s imaginative world and, in so doing, to open the doors of our perception.

Witness Against the Beast

Witness Against the Beast
Author: E. P. Thompson
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 284
Release: 1994-10-13
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780521469777

First paperback edition of one of E. P. Thompson's best and most deeply felt works.