Breadcrumbs Section. Click here to navigate to respective pages.
Book

Book
Women and Creativity
DOI link for Women and Creativity
Women and Creativity book
A Psychoanalytic Glimpse Through Art, Literature, and Social Structure
Women and Creativity
DOI link for Women and Creativity
Women and Creativity book
A Psychoanalytic Glimpse Through Art, Literature, and Social Structure
Edited ByLaura Tognoli Pasquali, Frances Thomson-Salo
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2014
eBook Published 17 June 2019
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
Pages 368
eBook ISBN 9780429485176
Subjects Behavioral Sciences
Share
Get Citation
Pasquali, L.T., & Thomson-Salo, F. (Eds.). (2014). Women and Creativity: A Psychoanalytic Glimpse Through Art, Literature, and Social Structure (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429485176
ABSTRACT
This book addresses aspects of how creativity is viewed in psychoanalytic theory and worked with in the consulting room, with particular reference to human generativity and the life cycle, within the arts in the broadest sense and its workings in society and culture in the widest sense.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|75 pages
Creativity in Psychoanalytic Theory
chapter Five|9 pages
Discussion of “William, did you say: ‘Much Ado about Nothing’?” by Juan Eduardo Tesone
ByIngrid Moeslein-Teising
part II|118 pages
Creativity in Psychoanalytic Practice throughout the Life Cycle
chapter Ten|8 pages
A psychoanalyst in the labour room: the birth of emotions
ByLaura Tognoli Pasquali
chapter Eleven|11 pages
Generativity and creativity: dialogue between an obstetrician and a psychoanalyst
BySandra Morano, Anna Maria Risso
chapter Twelve|21 pages
Dreaming about pregnancy when it is not there: two clinical cases
ByAnna Barlocco
chapter Fourteen|10 pages
Discussion of “A particular kind of sterility” by Jones de Luca
ByEster Palerm Mari
chapter Fifteen|22 pages
“With you I can bleat my heart out”*—older women in psychoanalytic practice
ByChristiane Schrader
part III|40 pages
Creativity in the Arts and Literature
chapter Sixteen|16 pages
Using contents from a sewing box: some aspects of the artwork of Sonia Delaunay and Louise Bourgeois
ByMaria Grazia Vassallo Torrigiani
part IV|87 pages
Living Creatively in Society
chapter Nineteen|18 pages
Happily ever after: depictions of coming of age in fairy tales
ByCecile R. Bassen
chapter Twenty-One|12 pages
Horses and other animals: some background obstacles to female creativity in Russia
ByMarina Arutyunyan
chapter Twenty-Two|8 pages
Is healing possible for women survivors of domestic violence?
ByNicoletta Livi Bacci
chapter Twenty-Three|13 pages
No peaceable woman: creativity in feminist political psychoanalysis—commemorating Margarete Mitscherlich-Nielsen (17.7.1917–12.6.2012)
ByIngrid Moeslein-Teising, Gertraud Schlesinger-Kipp, Christiane Schrader, Almuth Sellschopp