My Madness Saved Me: The Madness & Marriage of Virginia Woolf

Thomas Szasz

170 pages, Hardcover

ISBN: 0765803216

ISBN13:

Language: English

Publish: 1138608000000

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In this book Szasz argues that Virginia Woolf was a victim neither of mental illness, nor psychiatry, nor her husband — three ways she is regularly portrayed. He finds her to be an intelligent and self-assertive person, a moral agent who used mental illness, psychiatry, and her husband to fashion for herself a life of her own choosing. This is not to impute to Virginia Woolf some sort of limitless freedom of the will, nor is it to deny that the cultural and social milieu in which she grew up and lived had a profound impact on her psyche and her sense of the life choices open to her. It is only to remind us of the primacy of Virginia Woolf as an active, goal-directed, moral agent, responsible equally for her madness-badness and her genius-creativity.

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