Vaslav Nijinsky: A Leap Into Madness, Volume 10 |
Contents
The Eighth Wonder of the World | 1 |
Dancing for Diaghilev | 25 |
Nijinsky as Choreographer | 53 |
Marriage | 78 |
Career Problems and the First Breakdown | 99 |
Partial Recovery and Return to Dancing | 124 |
Warnings | 153 |
Playing the Role of a Madman | 178 |
In Search of a Cure | 249 |
Invalidism | 277 |
Moving Again | 301 |
The Dance of Death and Immortality | 329 |
Nijinskys Electrocardiograms | 345 |
A Formal Diagnosis of Nijinskys Psychosis | 348 |
Bibliography | 351 |
359 | |
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Common terms and phrases
Alexandre Benois artists asked audience Ballets Russes became behavior Bellevue Sanatorium Benois Bleuler Bronislava Nijinska Budapest called catatonia catatonic child choreographer costume dance dancer depression Diaghilev diagnosis disease doctors Dolin Emilia Márkus Eulenspiegel father feel felt Fokine gestures Greiber Grigoriev hospital husband Ibid Igor Igor Stravinsky illness insulin Jeux Karsavina Kreuzlingen Kurt Binswanger Kyra L'Après-midi d'un Faune later Letter from Romola Lifar London looked Ludwig Binswanger mental mood Moritz mother movements Müller Münsingen Münsingen Archives Nijinsky Archives Nijinsky seemed Nijinsky's Notebook on Death Opera Oscar Párdány Paris patient performance Petersburg Petrushka played psychiatric psychiatrist Pulszky rehearsals Richard Buckle Robert Craft role Romola Nijinsky Romola says Romola writes Russian Sakel schizophrenia sexual sister stage stay symptoms talking Tamara Tamara Karsavina theater thought Till Eulenspiegel told treatment tried Vaslav Nijinsky Vienna wanted wife wrote York Zürich
References to this book
Eminent Creativity, Everyday Creativity, and Health Mark A. Runco,Ruth Richards No preview available - 1997 |