4.1 Article

Is A Dip Still A Plunge? A Consideration of Immersion by Degree: Response to Corbett and Stephens

Journal

PSYCHOANALYTIC DIALOGUES
Volume 31, Issue 5, Pages 602-605

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10481885.2021.1956843

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The author responds to the critique of Milner's plunge metaphor by Corbett and Stephens, emphasizing that the movements inward and outward are central to creative life. She argues that creative experience emerges from transitionality rather than relationality, and clarifies the contributions of British Independent group theorists in this area.
The author responds to discussions by Corbett and Stephens (this issue). She considers the discussants' critique of Milner's plunge metaphor as a way to capture the experience of entering immersive creative states and responds to the claim that the model does not capture the full range of ways individuals and groups may experience and live out such states. The author contends that the movements inward and outward are a central feature of creative life, even when they occur on a smaller scale and do not entail a totalizing retreat from the social world. Finally, the author suggests that creative experience emerges from transitionality as opposed to relationality and clarifies the British Independent group theorists' contributions to this area of thought.

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