Surrealist women artists and mental illness Luisa M. KayeSurrealists idealized feminine madness for its purportedly unfettered access to the unconscious. At the same time, an unusually large number of surrealist women artists, including Leonora Carrington and Frida Kahlo, experienced mental illness. Die these women find the dream of feminized, mad genius prohibitiveor productive?
as well as information about the most current and effective drugs for management
perhaps in part because of this
This book reinterprets early seventeenth-century texts by situating them within the context of Jacobean writing on Britain and Britishness
The first complete intellectual biography of one of the most influential and controversial philosophers of the twentieth century
and value to wildlife as a food plant
" and thus becomes a self-reinforcing
The Shivastotravali reflects Utpaladeva's philosophy
Blackledge develops an alternative ethical theory for the Marxist tradition
but also the tensions that remain
such as whether they favor vs
This book describes the multi-disciplinary research of the Körös Regional Archaeological Project in southeastern Hungary
and from literary figures (Goethe