The Nature of Melancholy: From Aristotle to KristevaJennifer Radden "Spanning twenty four centuries, this anthology collects over thirty selections from important Western writing about melancholy and related conditions by philosophers, doctors, religious and literary figures, and modern psychologists. It reveals a conversation across centuries and continents as the authors interpret, respond to, and build on each other's work. Truly interdisciplinary, it is the first collection of original texts on melancholy, melancholia, and depression." "Arranged historically and accompanied by introductory notes for the general reader, the selections emphasize conceptual questions about the nature of melancholic states, their definition, classification, and alleged causal origin, as well as their characteristic signs, symptoms, and subjectivity. Among the selections are writings by such diverse authors as Galen, Hildegard of Bingen, Weyer, Rush, Keats, Baudelaire, Kraepelin, Freud, and Beck. This up-to-date collection presents recent authoritative translations of works either long out of print in English or never before translated into English." "This anthology will be an excellent text for courses in psychology, philosophy of mind, medicine, social work, women's studies, and cultural studies. The Nature of Melancholy will also be fruitful reading for those who suffer from depression, as well as their families, care-givers, clinicians, and therapists."--BOOK JACKET. |
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acedia adust affective afflicted Aristotle associated Avicenna become behavioral believed black bile blood bodily body brain Burton called Canon of Medicine cause CHAPTER character Charlotte choly classification clinical depression cognitive cold condition cured death delusion depressive position derangement despondency devil disease disposition edition emotional emphasis experience external faculty faculty psychology fear and sadness feeling female four humors frequently Freud Galen grief heart Hippocrates humor hypochondriac ideas ideational insanity imagination influence kind Kraepelin learned helplessness loss loved object madness mania manic manic-depressive illness Maudsley medicine melan melancholy ment mental disorder mind mood morbid mourning nature neurotransmitter nineteenth century norepinephrine normal observed pain passion patient person phlegm produce psychiatry psychological reason Renaissance saith sense sion sometimes sorrow soul spirits Spleen studies suffering suicide symptoms Teresa of Avila theory things thinking thou thought tion Translated Werther woman women writing