Marion Milner On Creativity

Marion Milner On Creativity by David Russell, published by Oxford University Press in 2024, explores the intricate relationships between reading, drawing, and personal growth. This 192-page book delves into the thoughts of British essayist, artist, and psychoanalyst Marion Milner, who examined how these activities contribute to feeling alive and creatively responsive. Milner’s inquiries spanned diverse fields, including anthropology, literature, and psychology, positioning her as a significant thinker on creativity in the twentieth century.
Readers will discover Milner’s unique approach to creative practices of attention, emphasizing how individuals engage with their lives and the lives of others. Russell highlights Milner’s literary and artistic endeavors, showcasing her innovative diary format that intertwines past and present experiences. This edition invites readers to reflect on their own creative processes and the ways in which they perceive the world, making connections across various disciplines such as psychology and art.
Official synopsis Publisher
This is a book about reading, drawing, and getting better–and what they have to do with one another.
The British essayist, artist, and psychoanalyst Marion Milner (1900-1996) thought deeply about how reading, drawing, and getting better related to each other. The guiding question of Milner’s life was of how people come to feel alive in, and feel creatively responsive to, their own lives. In pursuit of this, Milner explored fields as diverse as anthropology, folklore, education, literature, art, philosophy, mysticism, and psychology. She became one of the twentieth century’s most extraordinary thinkers about creativity.
David Russell shows that there is no writer quite like Milner and the rewards of reading her are immense. Key to all her writing is her search for creative practices of attention–of how we pay attention in the life we have. She helped to develop a kind of psychoanalysis in Britain that focussed on the ways people relate to their own lives and the lives of others.
Milner was literary and artistic; she took herself as her subject. Her writing performs ways of responding associatively to the words and images she encountered. In the process, she found she was a quite different person than she had first thought. In the 1930s Milner invented a form for writing about reading: an original kind of diary book, which is structured by the experience of going back to, and rereading, past diaries. In her interplay of past and present selves, she finds new ways of looking at, and experiencing, the world.
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