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William Blake vs. the World

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A wild and unexpected journey through culture, science, philosophy and religion to better understand the mercurial genius of William Blake.
Poet, artist, and visionary, William Blake is an archetypal misunderstood genius. His life passed without recognition and he worked without reward, often mocked, dismissed and misinterpreted. Yet from his ignoble end in a pauper's grave, Blake now occupies a unique position as an artist who unites and attracts people from all corners of society—a rare inclusive symbol of human identity.

Blake famously experienced visions, and it is these that shaped his attitude to politics, sex, religion, society, and art. Thanks to the work of neuroscientists and psychologists, we are now in a better position to understand what was happening inside that remarkable mind and gain a deeper appreciation of his brilliance. His timeless work, we will find, has never been more relevant.

In William Blake vs the World we return to a world of riots, revolutions, and radicals; discuss movements from the Levellers of the sixteenth century to the psychedelic counterculture of the 1960s; and explore the latest discoveries in neurobiology, quantum physics, and comparative religion.

Taking the reader on a wild adventure into unfamiliar territory, John Higgs places the bewildering eccentricities of a most singular artist into fascinating context. And although the journey begins with us trying to understand him, we will ultimately discover that it is Blake who helps us to understand ourselves.
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    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2022
      A journey into the iconic poet's sensuous, idiosyncratic mythology. British cultural historian Higgs draws on neuroscience, psychology, comparative religion, physics, and philosophy to examine the mind of poet, artist, and visionary William Blake (1757-1827). Mocked in his own time and buried in an unmarked pauper's grave, Blake has become a venerated figure in British culture. In 2018, more than 1,000 people gathered for the unveiling of a stone marker near where he is believed to be buried, and his artistry has been recognized by an exhibition at the Tate and other museums. Besides offering perceptive close analyses of Blake's work (including the art that illustrates this volume), Higgs locates him within the turbulent political and religious contexts of his times: French and American Revolutions, the rise of industrialism, anti-Catholic rioting, the Enlightenment's privileging of reason over imagination, and the advent of Romanticism. He ranges into theories of consciousness and the meaning and significance of imagination to unravel Blake's fundamental idea "that we live in a mental model of reality, rather than reality itself." Even God, Blake argued, was a creation of the human mind. Higgs examines Blake's fascination with--and divergence from--scientist and mystic Emanuel Swedenborg, whom Blake critiqued in The Marriage of Heaven and Hell. In discussing the "blazing originality" of Blake's imaginings, Higgs proposes they may reflect the heightened mental states of hyperphantasia or synaesthesia. "The increased empathy and anxiety experienced by hyperphantasics," writes the author, "suggests a link between Blake's politics and moral outrage and the strength of his imagination." Although some of his contemporaries deemed him a madman, Blake was esteemed by many Romantic poets who saw him as a kindred spirit. Higgs acknowledges that Blake's apparent misogyny, growing paranoia, and views on nature and reason make him troubling to contemporary readers, but he makes an earnest case for the enduring relevance of Blake's central argument: "that the imagination is divine." An appreciative, well-informed portrait.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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