Skip to main content
On Creativity and the Unconscious: The Psychology of Art, Literature, Love, and Religion (Harper Perennial Modern Thought)

On Creativity and the Unconscious: The Psychology of Art, Literature, Love, and Religion (Harper Perennial Modern Thought)

Current price: $18.99
Publication Date: March 3rd, 2009
Publisher:
Harper Perennial Modern Classics
ISBN:
9780061718694
Pages:
336
Usually Ships in 3 to 8 Days

Description

On Creativity and the Unconscious brings together Freud's important essays on the many expressions of creativity—including art, literature, love, dreams, and spirituality. This diverse collection includes "The 'Uncanny,'" "The Moses of Michelangelo," "The Psychology of Love," "The Relation of the Poet to Day-Dreaming," "On War and Death," and "Dreams and Telepathy."

About the Author

The father of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) was born in Austria and studied medicine at the University of Vienna. His many works include The Interpretation of Dreams and Civilization and Its Discontents.

Praise for On Creativity and the Unconscious: The Psychology of Art, Literature, Love, and Religion (Harper Perennial Modern Thought)

“Freud, more than any other explorer of the psyche, shaped the mind of the 20th century” — Peter Gay, Time magazine

“The founder of psychoanalysis gave the world more than a theory and a therapy. He provided a world view. His ideas about dreams, religion, creativity, and the unconscious motivations underlying all human behavior are so pervasive that it would be difficult to imagine twentieth-century thought without them.” — Newsweek

“Freud is a deep explorer of the human condition, working in a tradition which goes back to Sophocles and which extends through Plato, Saint Augustine and Shakespeare to Proust and Nietzsche. . . .no thinker has made creativity and imagination more democratically available than Freud. This is one of the truly important consequences of locating the unconscious inside the psyche. Creativity is no longer the exclusive preserve of the divinely inspired, or the few great poets. From a psychoanalytic point of view, everyone is poetic; everyone dreams in metaphor and generates symbolic meaning in the process of living.” — New Republic