ABSTRACT

In this volume an inquiry into the nature of the creative process is attempted by paying close attention to the lives of various artists, poets, novelists and playwrights, and selected works of each in order to demonstrate an essential relationship between the two, and that it is most difficult to delineate the nuances of the creative act by treating them as separate entitites. Emphasis is placed upon the effect of early trauma, such as object loss and various forms of deprivation, as a powerful unconscious motivating factor and upon the dream and transitional object as facilitators of the creative effort.

chapter One|38 pages

John Keats

chapter Two|50 pages

Joseph Conrad

chapter Three|44 pages

Eugene O’Neill

chapter Four|28 pages

Thomas Hardy

chapter Five|26 pages

Vladimir Nabokov

chapter Six|35 pages

George Orwell

chapter Seven|29 pages

Heinrich von Kleist

chapter Eight|30 pages

Thomas Wolfe

chapter Nine|19 pages

Peter Shaffer