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OverviewThis book is a small anthology: each chapter a kind of meditation-on poetry and psychoanalysis; on a poem, sometimes two; on poetry in general; on thought itself. The poems are beautiful, some are contemporary, some are classical and well worth a reader's attention. ""The motive for metaphor"" is the title of a short poem of Wallace Stevens in which he says he is ""happy"" with the subtleties of experience. He likes what he calls the ""half colours of quarter things,"" as opposed to the certainties, the hard primary ""reds"" and ""blues."" To grasp and make sense of what is elusive (and beautiful), that is, for the essential and puzzling condition of poetry, we are obliged to make metaphors. The same is perhaps true of psychoanalysis-this is the essential argument of the book. The chapters were originally poetry columns that the author wrote for Psychologist-Psychoanalyst and Division/Review (both journals of the Division of Psychoanalysis of the American Psychological Association). Full Product DetailsAuthor: Henry M. SeidenPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9780367103620ISBN 10: 0367103621 Pages: 164 Publication Date: 21 June 2019 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents"Foreword , Introduction , Jokes, fathers, grief, and angels: a poem by Sherman Alexie , Speaking of pain: Yehuda Amichai , A sad story, briefly told: a poem by Simon Armitage , “Finding in the sound a thought”: Matthew Arnold’s “Dover beach” , Auden’s “Lullaby” and Winnnicott’s “Hate …” , An awakening: a poem by Elizabeth Bishop , On the pleasure in play: the poetry of Billy Collins , Tyger time: e. e. cummings on conscientious objection , On idea and image and “the space between”: a poem by Albert Goldbarth , “When your heart cries out, being carried off …”: a poem by Eamon Grennan , “Old pond, frog jump in …”"" the genius of haiku , Postmodern metaphor: a poem by Robert Hass , The air of another time and place: a poem by Seamus Heaney , Poetry as argument: a poem by Tony Hoagland , Marie Howe on “What the living do” , Kenneth Koch on psychoanalysis in the “glory days” , An old man’s love song: a poem by Stanley Kunitz , “They fuck you up …” Philip Larkin’s “This be the verse” , The art of the ordinary: Philip Levine on “What work is” , How otherness dissolves: a poem by Thomas Lux , Mysterious tears: a poem by Rose McLarney , A meditation without punctuation by W. S. Merwin , Narrative as metaphor: Sharon Olds , “The meaning of simplicity”: a poem by Yannis Ritsos , Saying a lot with a little: the poetry of Kay Ryan , On the love of beauty—and a poem by Charles Simic , When the narrative changes: a poem by A. E. Stallings , Metaphors for mind: the poet Gerald Stern , Negative capability and Wallace Stevens’s “The emperor of ice-cream” , Tracks in the snow: a poem of the Sung dynasty , On style: Tennyson and Cavafy, and intersubjective engagement , Empathic music: a poem of William Carlos Williams , The pathetic fallacy: William Carlos Williams and Emily Dickinson , W. B. Yeats on “Where love has pitched his mansion …”*"Reviews"""Like Walt Whitman, Henry M. Seiden is 'large and contains multitudes' - taking on poets of various times and places, finding unexpected and delightful links to psychoanalysis, and sharing honest and personal reflections of his responses as a reader and fellow poet. All of the pieces in this volume are short and succinct; they invite rereading, and are well worth savoring. Indeed, I read many of the pieces in this book when they were originally published, and it was a pleasure to find that I appreciated them even more the second time around. Anyone who is interested in the intersection of the humanities and psychoanalysis will learn a great deal from reading Seiden's work.""--Elliot Jurist, PhD, The City College of New York and Graduate Center of the City University of New York ""Psychoanalysis and poetics have been joined since Freud noted Schiller's letter to a young poet to illustrate the state of mind conducive to psychoanalytic reflection. Psychoanalysts like Sharpe, Lacan, Bion, and Winnicott have reflected on this link and indeed have built their theories of the clinical process on it. Henry M. Seiden's lively and evocative essays, collected in this volume, stand firmly in this great tradition, and contribute new perspectives to it. He generally approaches the link from the side of poetry and then examines the interplay with the psychoanalytic process. The results frequently shed new light on both psychoanalysis and poetry and the cumulative effect is to enliven our appreciation of their common roots.""--David Lichtenstein, PhD, co-founder, faculty, and supervisor at the Apres-Coup Psychoanalytic Association; editor, DIVISION/Review: A Quarterly Psychoanalytic Forum ""Henry M. Seiden's The Motive for Metaphor exemplifies Freud's admonition that the best way to deepen our appreciation of psychoanalytic process is through intense study of the arts, in this case, poetry. Both poets and psychotherapists will find sustenance in these essays. Seiden brings a deep respect for both the poetic and psychoanalytic process allowing each perspective to refract and illuminate the other.""--William A. MacGillivray, PhD, ABPP, Past President, Division of Psychoanalysis, American Psychological Association" Like Walt Whitman, Henry M. Seiden is 'large and contains multitudes' - taking on poets of various times and places, finding unexpected and delightful links to psychoanalysis, and sharing honest and personal reflections of his responses as a reader and fellow poet. All of the pieces in this volume are short and succinct; they invite rereading, and are well worth savoring. Indeed, I read many of the pieces in this book when they were originally published, and it was a pleasure to find that I appreciated them even more the second time around. Anyone who is interested in the intersection of the humanities and psychoanalysis will learn a great deal from reading Seiden's work. --Elliot Jurist, PhD, The City College of New York and Graduate Center of the City University of New York Psychoanalysis and poetics have been joined since Freud noted Schiller's letter to a young poet to illustrate the state of mind conducive to psychoanalytic reflection. Psychoanalysts like Sharpe, Lacan, Bion, and Winnicott have reflected on this link and indeed have built their theories of the clinical process on it. Henry M. Seiden's lively and evocative essays, collected in this volume, stand firmly in this great tradition, and contribute new perspectives to it. He generally approaches the link from the side of poetry and then examines the interplay with the psychoanalytic process. The results frequently shed new light on both psychoanalysis and poetry and the cumulative effect is to enliven our appreciation of their common roots. --David Lichtenstein, PhD, co-founder, faculty, and supervisor at the Apres-Coup Psychoanalytic Association; editor, DIVISION/Review: A Quarterly Psychoanalytic Forum Henry M. Seiden's The Motive for Metaphor exemplifies Freud's admonition that the best way to deepen our appreciation of psychoanalytic process is through intense study of the arts, in this case, poetry. Both poets and psychotherapists will find sustenance in these essays. Seiden brings a deep respect for both the poetic and psychoanalytic process allowing each perspective to refract and illuminate the other. --William A. MacGillivray, PhD, ABPP, Past President, Division of Psychoanalysis, American Psychological Association Psychoanalysis and poetics have been joined since Freud noted Schiller's letter to a young poet to illustrate the state of mind conducive to psychoanalytic reflection. Psychoanalysts like Sharpe, Lacan, Bion, and Winnicott have reflected on this link and indeed have built their theories of the clinical process on it. Henry M. Seiden's lively and evocative essays, collected in this volume, stand firmly in this great tradition, and contribute new perspectives to it. He generally approaches the link from the side of poetry and then examines the interplay with the psychoanalytic process. The results frequently shed new light on both psychoanalysis and poetry and the cumulative effect is to enliven our appreciation of their common roots. --David Lichtenstein, PhD, co-founder, faculty, and supervisor at the Apres-Coup Psychoanalytic Association; editor, DIVISION/Review: A Quarterly Psychoanalytic Forum Like Walt Whitman, Henry M. Seiden is 'large and contains multitudes' - taking on poets of various times and places, finding unexpected and delightful links to psychoanalysis, and sharing honest and personal reflections of his responses as a reader and fellow poet. All of the pieces in this volume are short and succinct; they invite rereading, and are well worth savoring. Indeed, I read many of the pieces in this book when they were originally published, and it was a pleasure to find that I appreciated them even more the second time around. Anyone who is interested in the intersection of the humanities and psychoanalysis will learn a great deal from reading Seiden's work. --Elliot Jurist, PhD, The City College of New York and Graduate Center of the City University of New York Henry M. Seiden's The Motive for Metaphor exemplifies Freud's admonition that the best way to deepen our appreciation of psychoanalytic process is through intense study of the arts, in this case, poetry. Both poets and psychotherapists will find sustenance in these essays. Seiden brings a deep respect for both the poetic and psychoanalytic process allowing each perspective to refract and illuminate the other. --William A. MacGillivray, PhD, ABPP, Past President, Division of Psychoanalysis, American Psychological Association Author InformationHenry M Seiden Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |