Listing 1 - 10 of 181 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Shortly after the debut of Exorcism in 1920, Eugene O'Neill suddenly canceled production and ordered all extant copies of the drama destroyed. For over ninety years, it was believed that the play was irrevocably lost, until it was recently discovered that O'Neill's second wife had in fact retained a copy, which she later gave to the prolific screenwriter and producer Philip Yordan. In early 2011, Yordan's widow discovered the typescript of Exorcism-complete with edits in O'Neill's own hand-in her late husband's vast trove of papers. The discovery and publication of Exorcism, a relatively early play in the O'Neill corpus, furthers our knowledge of O'Neill's dramatic development and reveals a pivotal point in the career of this great American playwright.Revolving around a suicide attempt, Exorcism draws on a dark incident in O'Neill's own life. This defining event led to his first serious efforts to write. Exorcism displays early examples of O'Neill's unparalleled skills of capturing deeply personal human drama, and it explores major themes-mourning and melancholia, addiction and sobriety, tensions between fathers and sons-that would permeate his later work. According to Yale University's Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library curator Louise Bernard, who acquired the play from a New York bookseller, "Exorcism might be read as a preparatory sketch that resonates powerfully with Long Day's Journey into Night, one that brings the O'Neill family drama full circle in ways at once intimate and grandly conceived."
Melancholy --- Families --- Dejection --- Emotions --- Depression, Mental --- Sadness
Choose an application
Dejection --- Melancholie --- Melancholy --- Mélancolie --- Psychoanalysis --- Psychanalyse --- Mélancolie --- Melancholy.
Choose an application
Melancholy --- Dejection --- Emotions --- Depression, Mental --- Sadness --- History --- Spain --- Civilization --- History.
Choose an application
Sadness. --- Dejection --- Gloominess --- Tristitia --- Deadly sins --- Depression, Mental --- Emotions --- Melancholy
Choose an application
Angus Gowland investigates the theory of melancholy and its many applications in the Renaissance by means of a wide-ranging contextual analysis of Robert Burton's encyclopaedic Anatomy of Melancholy (first published in 1621). Approaching the Anatomy as the culmination of early modern medical, philosophical and spiritual inquiry about melancholy, Gowland examines the ways in which Burton exploited the moral psychology central to the Renaissance understanding of the condition to construct a critical vision of his intellectual and political environment. In the first sustained analysis of the evolving relationship of the Anatomy (in the various versions issued between 1621 and 1651) to late Renaissance humanist learning and early seventeenth-century England and Europe, Gowland corrects the prevailing view of the work as an unreflective digest of other authors' opinions, and reveals the Anatomy's character as a polemical literary engagement with the live intellectual, religious and political issues of its day.
Burton, Robert --- Melancholy. --- Burton, Robert, --- Dejection --- Emotions --- Depression, Mental --- Sadness --- Arts and Humanities --- History
Choose an application
L'éminent helléniste et spécialiste de la médecine ancienne, Jackie Pigeaud, nous livre ici une histoire de la mélancolie, née avec les Grecs, qui tentent de construire une stratégie de vie entre philosophie et médecine.
Melancholy --- Mélancolie --- History --- Histoire --- History. --- Mélancolie --- Dejection --- Emotions --- Depression, Mental --- Sadness --- Melancholy - History
Choose an application
Melancholy in literature --- Melancholy --- Social aspects --- Mélancolie --- Dejection --- Emotions --- Depression, Mental --- Sadness --- Mélancolie. --- Melancholy - Social aspects
Choose an application
Philosophical anthropology --- History of philosophy --- melancholie --- Dejection --- Depression, Mental --- Sadness --- Melancholy --- Emotions --- History --- geschiedenis --- filosofie
Choose an application
Melancholy --- Mélancolie --- Dejection --- Emotions --- Depression, Mental --- Sadness --- Early works to 1800. --- Philosophical anthropology --- English literature --- Melancholy.
Choose an application
Dans la médecine grecque, la mélancolie, la bile noire, est d'abord un liquide organique, au même titre que le flegme, la bile jaune et le sang. De l'équilibre de ces humeurs ou de leur déséquilibre dépend la santé ou la maladie des individus. Elles déterminent surtout le tempérament de ces derniers, l'esprit et le corps étant indissociables. Le tempérament du mélancolique a préoccupé, bien plus que les autres, non seulement les médecins, mais aussi les philosophes et les poètes, les peintres et les musiciens, car, depuis l'Antiquité également, il est le signe distinctif de l'homme d'exception, du génie. C'est ce qu'a mis en évidence pour la première fois dans la longue durée, l'exposition de Jean Clair, Mélancolie. Génie et folie en Occident. Elle avait réuni par centaines des oeuvres plastiques, des observations scientifiques, des documents imprimés, afin d'illustrer l'histoire mouvementée et les multiples facettes de ce sentiment - le seul qui pense - qui ne se confond ni avec la simple tristesse ni avec notre moderne dépression dont elle participe pourtant. Toutes les époques de la civilisation européenne - et d'elle seule, semble-t-il - ont connu cette affection du corps et de l'âme, cette fureur du créateur, ce désespoir de penser. Elle lui ont donné différents noms : taedium vitae, acedia, spleen, mal de siècle, lypémanie, névrose maniaco-dépressive. C'est à la suite de cette exposition, et pour en discuter une nouvelle fois les tenants et les aboutissants, que des médecins et des psychiatres, des historiens de la pensée grecque, des historiens et des critiques d'art, des historiens de la littérature se sont réunis à la Fondation des Treilles. Dans un esprit transdisciplinaire, ils reviennent ici sur les aspects les plus importants de la mélancolie antique, de l'acédie médiévale, des différentes formes de la mélancolie à la Renaissance et à l'âge classique, du mal du siècle romantique, du spleen baudelairien, des névroses contemporaines. Ces entretiens mettent en lumière la profonde unité de la mélancolie, d'Hippocrate à Freud, d'Aristote à Levinas, de Michel-Ange à Giacometti, des pères de l'Eglise aux cliniciens d'aujourd'hui.
Philosophical anthropology --- Melancholy --- Dejection --- Emotions --- Depression, Mental --- Sadness --- Melancholy. --- Mélancolie. --- Literary and philosophical studies --- Mélancolie --- Histoire. --- Baudelaire, Charles, --- Nerval, Gérard de, --- Critique et interprétation.
Listing 1 - 10 of 181 | << page >> |
Sort by
|