The Insanity Hoax: Exposing the Myth of the Mad Genius
- Author:
- Judith Schlesinger, Ph.D.
- Publisher:
- Self-published
- Reviewed in:
- Winter 2011-12
- Category:
- Psychology
Judith Schlesinger has spent her entire life marveling at creativity and surrounding herself with others who cherish it. Psychologist, psychotherapist, author, educator, musician, jazz critic, and producer, she believes that genius should be celebrated, not diagnosed. In her book The Insanity Hoax she sheds light on an old and destructive stereotype: the idea that the highly talented must suffer a lifetime of psychological torment in payment for their exceptional gifts. Despite exaggerated professional claims, widespread popular assumptions, and the dramatic parade of “mad geniuses” in the media, no one has ever proved that creative people are more prone to psychopathology than any other group. The Insanity Hoax tracks this fantasy’s history from its birth in ancient Greece to today, showing how Plato’s benevolent “divine madness” slowly darkened into a symptom of bipolar disorder — and why the myth is too deeply embedded in society to ever disappear. Schlesinger uses her three decades of research and creative and clinical experience to make a convincing case, while providing a witty and entertaining read.
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