ABSTRACT

The Creative Feminine and her Discontents, Psychotherapy, Art, and Destruction, is a look at creativity from a woman's perspective. By looking at artistic endeavour, mothering and psychotherapeutic relationships, Juliet Miller considers how a patriarchal world distorts the channels through which women discover their own creative voices. She argues that the dynamics of female creativity are more multi-layered and conflicted for women for a variety of historical, cultural and archetypal reasons and suggests that an attack on the creative feminine has been exacerbated by the history and teaching of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy. Miller looks to the artistic community to discover new ways for the creative feminine to grow and assesses how ideas of destruction and anarchy are crucial for the expression of a feminine self. The work of two contemporary sculptors, Cornelia Parker and Louise Bourgeois, is explored to show how there can be authentic relationships to creativity through the ideas of deconstruction and reconstruction in their work. This book will interest psychotherapists and analysts and both women and men interested in their own relationship to their creativity.

part I|31 pages

Creativity and Fear

chapter ONE|15 pages

The search for a voice

chapter TWO|13 pages

Using a voice

part II|33 pages

Creativity and Procreativity

chapter THREE|16 pages

The dilemma of motherhood

chapter FOUR|15 pages

The problem of infertility

part III|32 pages

Creativity and Psychotherapy

chapter FIVE|15 pages

History, gender, and relating

chapter SIX|14 pages

Patriarchy and hate in training institutes

part IV|42 pages

Creativity and Art

chapter |2 pages

Conclusion