ABSTRACT

How close is spirituality to psychosis?

Covering the interrelation of psychosis and spirituality from a number of angles, Insanity and Divinity will generate dialogue and discussion, aid critical reflection and stimulate creative approaches to clinical work for those interested in the connections between religious studies, psychoanalysis, anthropology and hagiography.

Bringing together an international range of contributors and covering many different types of religious experience, this book presents its theme in three parts:

Psychoanalysis, belief and mysticism

Anthropology, history and hagiography

Psychology, psychosis and religious experience.

Each section includes discussion of the hinterland between madness and religious experience from the perspective of a number of religions, autobiographical accounts of those who have experienced a psychosis in which spirituality played a key part and a comprehensive review of the position of psychology research into the meaning and function of spirituality in relation to the psychoses.

Insightful, enlightening and wide-ranging, Insanity and Divinity is ideal for clinicians, academics and chaplains working in clinical settings.

part 1|78 pages

Psychoanalysis, Belief and Mysticism

chapter |6 pages

Introduction to Part 1

Fragments of madness and delusion

chapter 1|18 pages

From Beyond Speech to Non-Inscription

Spirit and psyche in the philosophy of psychoanalysis

chapter 3|28 pages

Jung's Divine Madness

part 2|112 pages

Anthropology, History and Hagiography

chapter |9 pages

Introduction to Part 2

Conversion and the fragmented body

chapter 4|22 pages

Divine Madness

Tantric ascetics on the cremation ground in Tarapith, Birbhum District, West Bengal

chapter 5|19 pages

Models of Wisdom and Sanctity

The conversion of St Francis of Assisi

chapter 6|22 pages

Spiritual Conversion in The Bhagavad Gita

A psychoanalytic study

part 3|52 pages

Psychology, Psychosis and Religious Experience

chapter |3 pages

Introduction to Part 3

Religion, spirituality and the experience of psychosis

chapter 11|15 pages

Dimensions of Religious/Spiritual Wellbeing and the Psychotic Experience

Empirical results and perspectives