Back to All Events

Creativity, Addiction, and Mood Disorders

Leslie Jamison, Writing, and clinical psychologist Kay Redfield Jamison, Johns Hopkins University. Moderated by Phillip Lopate '64 CC, Writing.

A conversation about the relationship between mental illness, psychic suffering, addiction, and creativity, focused particularly on the poets Robert Lowell and John Berryman. Lowell was a poet of astonishing originality and force. As well, he was subject to relentless attacks of psychotic mania and depression. He wrote in spite of illness, and at times because of it. He wrote with an iron discipline and commitment to his art; he wrote because "it takes the ache away." Berryman for many years believed his art “depended on his drinking,” but in the last years of his life struggled to understand a different relationship between his anguish, his booze, and the wild liberties of his art.

Co-presented by Columbia Narrative Medicine, the Department of Psychiatry, and Columbia University School of the Arts.

Books were available for purchase from Book Culture, including:
Robert Lowell, Setting the River on Fire: A Study of Genius, Mania, and Character, by Kay Redfield Jamison

The Recovering: Intoxication and Its Aftermath, by Leslie Jamison

Make It Scream, Make It Burn, by Leslie Jamison

Previous
Previous
November 20

Acting Thesis: Where Do We Live

Next
Next
December 14

Lenfest Kids: H2O presents 'March of the Penguins’