| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| English Books | Anna Centenary Library 3RD FLOOR, A WING | 153.35 BRI.10 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 221584 |
| 153.35 BAR Creators on creating : awakening and cultivating the imaginative mind | 153.35 BOH On creativity | 153.35 BON How to have creative ideas : 62 exercises to develop the mind | 153.35 BRI.10 The Creative Matrix: Anxiety and the Origin of Creativity | 153.35 BUZ The power of creative Intelligence | 153.35 CAM Finding water : the art of perseverance | 153.35 CAM Letters to a young artist |
Includes index
The Creative Matrix shows how Freudian and Kleinian theories of creativity are giving way to an attachment model, owing to research on anxiety by John Bowlby and other psychobiologists. We are entering an era of rapproachment between psychoanalysis, neurobiology, and attachment theory. Theory of creativity must take into account the rapid advances toward an integrated view of human development and capacity for adaptation. The Creative Matrix offers a critical review of British Object Relations theories of creativity from Melanie Klein through Ronald Fairbairn, Marion Milner, D. W. Winnicott, and others. It studies these theories in the light of Bowlby's challenge to psychoanalytic accounts of child development and personality formation. Creativity is seen as a necessary concomitant of anxious attachment in infants and children - as a natural adaptive resource in overcoming trauma and other deflections of normal development. Brief studies of poets Robert Lowell, Sylvia Plath, and Anne Sexton show how attachment theory illuminates bipolar disorder and poetic creativity.
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