
This is a book about reading, drawing, and getting better--and what they have to do with one another.The British essayist, artist, and psychoanalyst Marion Milner (1900-1996) thought deeply about how reading, drawing, and getting better related to each other. The guiding question of Milner's life was of how people come to feel alive in, and feel creatively responsive to, their own lives. In pursuit of this, Milner explored fields as diverse as anthropology, folklore, education, literature, art, philosophy, mysticism, and psychology. She became one of the twentieth century's most extraordinary thinkers about creativity.David Russell shows that there is no writer quite like Milner and the rewards of reading her are immense. Key to all her writing is her search for creative practices of attention--of how we pay attention in the life we have. She helped to develop a kind of psychoanalysis in Britain that focussed on the ways people relate to their own lives and the lives of others.Milner was literary and artistic; she took herself as her subject. Her writing performs ways of responding associatively to the words and images she encountered. In the process, she found she was a quite different person than she had first thought. In the 1930s Milner invented a form for writing about reading: an original kind of diary book, which is structured by the experience of going back to, and rereading, past diaries. In her interplay of past and present selves, she finds new ways of looking at, and experiencing, the world.
How can individuals cultivate a state of creative responsiveness and authentic aliveness within their daily existence? David Russell examines the intellectual and artistic contributions of Marion Milner, a British psychoanalyst and writer who bridged the gap between clinical practice and creative expression. By analyzing Milner's unique methodology of self-observation and associative writing, Russell argues that her work offers a distinct framework for understanding how attention and reflection shape the human experience.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Critics and scholars identify this work as a significant introduction to Milner's often overlooked contributions to twentieth-century thought. Readers frequently note the accessible yet rigorous nature of Russell's analysis, which successfully contextualizes Milner's complex ideas for a contemporary audience.
Page Count:
192
Publication Date:
2025-01-10
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019285920X
ISBN-13:
9780192859204
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