In 1956, Anne Sexton was admitted into a mental hospital for
post-partum depression, where she met Dr. Martin Orne, a young
psychiatrist who treated her for the next eight years. In that time
Sexton would blossom into a world-famous poet, best known for her
"confessional" poems dealing with personal subjects not often
represented in poetry at that time: mental illness, depression,
suicide, sex, abortion, women's bodies, and the ordinary lives of
mothers and housewives. Orne audiotaped the last three years of her
therapy to facilitate her ability to remember their sessions. The
final six months of these tapes are the focus of this book.
In An Accident of Hope, Dawn Skorczewski links the content of
the therapy with poetry excerpts, offering a rare perspective on
the artist's experience and creative process. We can see Sexton
attempting to make sense of her life and therapy and to sustain her
confidence as a major poet, while struggling with the impending
loss of Orne, who was moving elsewhere. Skorczewski's study
provides an intimate, in-depth view of the therapy of a
psychologically tortured yet immensely creative woman, during a
period of emerging feminism and cultural change. Tracing the mutual
development of the poet and the therapist during their years
together, the author explores the tension between the classical
therapeutic setting as practiced in the early 1960s and
contemporary relational and developmental concepts in
psychoanalysis, just then beginning to emerge.
An Accident of Hope also raises broader questions about the
nature of healing in psychotherapy. The poet and therapist we
encounter in these sessions present complex and conflicted images
of the therapeutic and creative process. Orne, equal parts honesty
and hesitancy, works to bolster Sexton's self-image and maintain
that she is more than the sum of her poetry. Sexton, working
against a tendency to hide from her most painful feelings,
valiantly pushes to tell the truth in therapy, while her poems
invite the readers to see another side of the story.
Just as Orne kept the audiotapes so that one day they might help
others who suffer, An Accident of Hope tells the story of a therapy
but moves beyond it. By offering a glimpse into the past, the
present is open for reappraisal, both of Sexton herself and the
legacy of psychoanalytic treatment.
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