AnyBook4Less.com
Find the Best Price on the Web
Order from a Major Online Bookstore
Developed by Fintix
Home  |  Store List  |  FAQ  |  Contact Us  |  
 
Ultimate Book Price Comparison Engine
Save Your Time And Money

Black Sun

Please fill out form in order to compare prices
Title: Black Sun
by Julia Kristeva, Leon S. Roudiez
ISBN: 0-231-06707-0
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Pub. Date: 15 October, 1992
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $21.00
Your Country
Currency
Delivery
Include Used Books
Are you a club member of: Barnes and Noble
Books A Million Chapters.Indigo.ca

Average Customer Rating: 4.67 (3 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 4
Summary: Billy Us
Comment: Kristeva's is definitely worth a read. While staking a claim for the salubrious effects of psychoanalysis, the author freshly details art's engagement with melancholy and depression. The first chapter or two will make rough going for the reader who is not amused by the lexicon of psychoanalysis. But even readers with a literary intolerance of that sort will find the third chapter on feminine depression sensitively written and thoughtfully invested with human presence. The chapters on art and artists with melancholia make generally excellent reading. The most brief of the chapters, "Beauty: The Depressive Other's Realm," provides a soaring inauguration of the author's poetic and psychoanalytic approaches to the madness and melancholia among Durer, Nerval, Dostoevsky, and Duras. The chapter on Duras might not bear a discussion of an author familiar to American readers but it is worth reading because it alone of the chapters explicity raises questions concerning politics, expectations, madness and depression. The author investigates the sites she has chosen with great sensitivity and radiant intellect. Scattered clouds will be apparent to those who find psychoanalysis an unsatisfying or capricious methodology of investigation.

Rating: 5
Summary: A different approach to depression. A "must read."
Comment: This is a different approach to depression. Too often, our focus has been on the DSM-IV approach, or to the treatment of depression using selective seratonin reuptake inhibitors such as Prozac and Paxil. Very rarely does somebody, let alone a respected psychoanalyst, attempt to explain what it actually *feels* like to experience major depression. This is a writing that gives meaning to depression, and I feel that it helps people and their families understand the experience of depression.

The process of all modalities of psychotherapy involves communication, a dialogue between the therapist and the client. This process draws the client out and is an essential factor in the care of the client. Kristeva emphasizes the "antidepressant qualities of psychoanalysis." While acknowledging the utility of antidepressants in psychotherapy, the function of the linguistic component seeks to emphasize the meaning of the "inconsolable loss" experienced by the depressed patient. To symbolically illustrate the sensation of depression, Kristeva uses great sensativity in drawing on the poetry of Gerard de Nerval, the novels of Doestoyevsky, and Hans Holbein's picture "Dead Christ."

"Dark Sun" had meaning to me because of its emphasis on the *individual* and how he or she feels. We must always emphasize the dignity of the individual in dealing with the depressed.

Rating: 5
Summary: An energetic and exhaustive study of the blues.
Comment: In much the same way that Philippe Aries took the subject of childhood and illuminated it for all time in "Centuries of Childhood," fellow French writer (although Bulgarian-born) and Lacanian psychoanalyst Julia Kristeva examines depression and melancholia. She comes at it from various angles and filters: fine arts, literature, history, philosophy, religion, and of course psychology. She posits psychoanalysis as a (really THE) 'counterdepressant' -- convincingly. This is great highbrow stuff: chapters with titles like"Beauty, the Depressive's Other Realm," and "Life and Death of Speech." Death, suicide, the inevitable gloom resulting from loss of maternal, later erotic, love; all are insightfully discussed -- even rather tenderly. If you're depressed BLACK SUN won't make you more so -- and if you're feeling okay to begin with, it's a terrific scholarly study.

Similar Books:

Title: New Maladies of the Soul
by Julia Kristeva, Ross Guberman
ISBN: 0231099835
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Pub. Date: 15 April, 1997
List Price(USD): $21.50
Title: Tales of Love
by Julia Kristeva, Leon S. Roudiez
ISBN: 0231060254
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Pub. Date: 15 April, 1987
List Price(USD): $25.00
Title: Powers of Horror
by Julia Kristeva, Leon S. Roudiez
ISBN: 0231053479
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Pub. Date: 15 April, 1982
List Price(USD): $24.00
Title: Desire in Language
by Julia Kristeva, Thomas Gora, Leon S. Roudiez, Alice Jardine
ISBN: 0231048076
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Pub. Date: 15 April, 1980
List Price(USD): $23.50
Title: The Portable Kristeva
by Julia Kristeva, Kelly Oliver
ISBN: 0231105053
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Pub. Date: 15 April, 1997
List Price(USD): $21.50

Thank you for visiting www.AnyBook4Less.com and enjoy your savings!

Copyright� 2001-2021 Send your comments

Powered by Apache