FIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAIlLY SUNDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1935 ... .. . .... ................... .......... IN THE WORLD OF BOOKS Michigan Professor Abstains From Dogma In New Volume THE FOUNDATIONS OF HUMAN NATURE. By John Morris Dorsey. Longmans Green & Company. $2.80. EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr. Dorsey, study- ing at present with Dr. Sigmund Freud in Vienna, is associate professor of psychiatry in the University Medical School. By PROF. W. B. PILLSBURY (Of the PsychologyDepartment Dr. Dorsey approaches Human Na- ture with none of the tools or pre- suppositions of the conventional treatments. One who knows recent psychiatric literature can recognize most of the statements as modifica- tions of familiar theories, but no ref- erence is made to the traditional points of view or classifications. Most of the quotations that explain the conclusions are drawn from poets, philosophers, essayists, or novelists rather than from the technical lit- erature. The first chapter gives a number of interesting case histories, which are not worked into the later theory in any close way. It is asserted that the true aim of the mental hygienist is to understand. Many pathological cases owe their trouble or much of it to the lack of understanding pa- tients have had from the people who surround them. The only classi- fication that is suggested is into the normal man,-.the feeble-minded man, the genius, and the psychopathic per- son. The genius and the psychopath are said both to owe their distinc- tiveness tothe fact "that they have access to primordial stores of wis- dom," a reminiscence of Jung. The genius "can revel creatively in them," while the psychopath is "surrendered to the powers of antiquity" as "the primitive powers within him craftily plan and enjoy their escape." While this is intended primarily as a work for the mental hygienist, it contains much of more general im- port on human nature or life. It is laid down as a general principle of thought that one should always see both sides, should present both ex- tremes. In the author's picturesque phrase, it is asserted that "sound theugh.t is always a pulsation between two extremes." Following the lead of Adolf Meyer, there is practically no classification of mental disorders or disturbances. It is asserted that no two abnormal individuals are alike and that they are always abnormal for different reasons. If one apply the doctrine of opposites to this we can see that while classification may over-simplify the problem of abnormality; lack of classification makes generalization difficult. The unclear impression that is left by a series of discrete facts may be worse for the reader or stu- dent than the inaccuracies that are inevitable with assignments of indi- viduals to types. In spite of the original terms used, the general principles used in the explanations are familiar. The ab- normal individual, like the normal, derives his impulses from biological evolution, from the race to which he belongs, from the society and family in which he has lived. Jung's theory of the unconscious is drawn on large- ly for this material. Much stress is placed upon the types of introversion and extraver- sion as seen in the abnormal man. Again it is insisted that neither in- troversion or extraversion is itself an indication of mental disorder or like- lihood that personality disorders may develop. The right balance between the extremes gives a normal man. The usual words are replaced by the terms, "self projection" and "world identification." Whether one should be introverted or extraverted depends upon the function of that individual and the other factors in his make- up. GRIFFITH Dark Beauty Of Wales Is Depicted With LyricCharm SPRING OF YOUTH. By Llewelyn Wyn Griffith. Dutton. $1.50. By MARY SAGE MONTAGUE Mr. Griffith recalls his boyhood in Wales with a poignant nostalgia that finds expression in the intense na- tional spirit of the people and the dark mountainous beauty of !the land. But he writes more than a 'remem- brance of things past.' The sensa- tions which seem an intrinsic pos- session of childhood he disclaims as not entirely his own, and it is "the matters of moment" with which he is concerned, "the excitements and upheavals breaking one year from another. creating a time before and a time after. They carried a small boy into a new world, but they have gone: search as I will I cannot find them in me. They have shrunk into deducations, into words spoken by other people." His early life was completely Welsh, and the village of Machynlleth a world which had no further bounds than Cardigan Bay and the mountain heights of Pumlumon and Cader Idris. All thought and feeling found utterance in the native tongue, and all experience was interpreted in terms of Welsh custom. But a new element began to intrude and that element was the enforced study of English in school. "There was a period when I knew of it as a secret speech used by grown-ups, a thin and pinched language spoken between half-closed lips." Living in two languages he found at first like ,living two different existences, dif- ficult and confusing. But as he be- came more proficient he found that it doubled his pride, and he liked nothing better than to read aloud to his grandmother, and have her "hold up her hands in wonder." Undoubtedly one of the finest phases of the book is, first, the child's slow ; consciousness of music, then his rapidly growing admiration for it, and finally the inspiration that came from complete sympathy with it. He describes the aesthetic, almost spiritual release that came with the singing of hymns in church, when the congregation bound together by a spirit too deep for explanation or even half understanding, instinctive- ly paused at the same time or repeat- ed the same verses. "There had to be a release of emotion but it was. not released to die. At the end of a fine sermon, when the pulse had been quickened by a glimpse of some- thing of import, the congregation stood up as one man, eager to sing, eager to hold the vision a little longer, to spend some of its new strength in music, and thus to create a world of the spirit." Any attempt to analyze the charm of the writing would seem superflu- ous; the effect of this combination of delicacy and passion can be fully comprehended only in the Welsh word 'hiraeth' for which, in English,] 'longing' is forced to do duty," but only by implicating a more definable1 attitude, by particularizing an emo- tion which as 'hiraeth' transcends any limiting by reference to an ob- ject of aesire. In its descriptions of natural sur- roundings and the fine handling of introspection, the book embodies many of the qualities of a lyric poem; it is at once sensitive, and intense, and strangely beautiful. Sheer Honesty Of Spirit Marks Tale Of Literary Peregrinations THE STREET I KNOW. settlements, the start of the po By Harold E. Stearns. Lee Furman, war boom, prohibition and Red b Inc. $2.75. ing, made for even greater isolati By ROBERT HAKKEN and when he had: finished edit The record that Harold E. Stearns the important symposium, "Civili has enclosed within his autobiog- tion in the United States," Stea raphy, The Street I Know, is the left for what he intended should unhappy story of the Americans who a short jaunt to Europe, but wh fled to Paris because, in one way "ended in fact in my staying in P or another, they felt that their own . -. for five years." country had disinherited them and Out of the confusion of the P because only in Paris could they find chapters emerges valuable comm a civilization, which, since it ignored on the literary movements and p them, made a place for them. For sons who instigated them. By t Mr. Stearns the fierce journey began time he had become the race-tr during his high school days when prognosticator for the Paris editio he decided to become one of "the the Chicago Tribune and later for company of educated young men," Daily Mail, and he reaches out even though he must make his way place his fellow newsmen and h unaided. At Harvard he sat under self into the Paris picture. such noted and loved teachers as "That Sinclair Lewis or Sherw Royce, Taussig, Babbitt and Cope- Anderson visited Paris meant v land. Because "Copey" sardonically little, for they were visitors and no spoke of the work towards a degree ing else. And many who did ser with distinction as a mere effort to writing, like Glenway Wescott earn "thatevery moderate degree of Julian Green, for example, who praise," Stearns decided to try it in live in France, for a time, were philosophy. One of the unusual de- part of this self-conscious broth lights of this book is the accurate hood of Montparnasse, except i recapturing of Harvard's atmosphere dentally and en passant . . . Er and the special qualms Stearns felt Hemingway was no more Latin,1 before his oral examinations. The sically than Ring Lardner. Norv slight report of the actual questioning Gertrude Stein either, though: is one of the happiest touches in the was a Paris institution . . . but book. "When the session came to an she has written an entire book ab end, I think it was Babbitt who pulled that herself, I see no need here out an enormous cigar from his go into details about a career t pocket and handed it to me, saying, has received a degree of attention 'That will be all, Mr. Stearns,' " a ges- commensurate with its importan ture which was a practical hint that Essentially this is not a liter he thought Stearns had passed. effort so much as good newspap Stearns left Harvara for New York man's account of his activities, as soon as his last examinations were thoughts, and his feelings throu over and within a fortnight had his out his life. It is most like a p first job, reporting for the old Eve- sonal case history, which a psych ning Sun. Within a few months he trist might utilize in aiding Stea accepted his second on the Dramatic in his effort to orient himself in Mirror, and the shifting from one every day world of the United Sta job to another began. Stearns refers Perhaps this is what he is doing to these days of life in Greenwich himself most of all. For the b Village as his "salad days." They suggests at once the pradox were exciting and joyous. Everyone change between the character of: had money and everyone spent it with youth and the drifting of the m a carnival spirit. The spring of 1914 Stearns reveals here no attempt closed this era, and when Stearns left discover a philosophy by which for a first trip abroad, the tension --E o ht y r e h in Europe had not yet reached the RYE CHRTM S A United States. It was Somerset RYTEX CHRISTMAS CARD Maugham's continual statement that THURSDAY, December 12, is the a general war was "unthinkable," Christmas..f which revealed the anxiety prevalent STUDENT SUPPLY STORE in Europe at hte time. Stearns' re- 1111 S. University Ph. 868 turn from this first European journey marked the beginning of his later- Greenwich Village years, the charac- teristic pot-boiling existence of the times. With the close of the war and the ending of his work in Chicago, where he edited the Dial, Stearns finally achieved what he had always hoped for, the establishment of a home such as he himself had never had. Just before his wife left for California for the birth of their son he took a backward glance. "Just a few more M months . . .then, once and forever, the life of an ordinary member of the community. A taxpayer, a cit- izen, a voter, a father. Vagabondia was over with." Had all this hap- pened successfully, this story would scarcely have merited telling. But the end of those few months brought Make Your Sel news of his wife's death. This, along with the horrible promise of the peace ost- ait- on, ing za- rns be ich aris 'aris ent per- this ack n of the to iim- ood very th- ous or did not her- nci- nest ba- was she as out to hat not ice.'' ary er- his gh- er- hia- rns the tes. for ook ical the ian. to he S 8 might grow spiriuaily, such as Vin- cent Shan presents in Personal His- tory. As might be expected, the record of this venture, in this case his book, is not in itself an end. Consequently the prose and the spirit in which that prose is written is little concerned with what is often con- sidered a literary quality, and the book definitely lacks such an attri- bute. Its style, if one may utilize that word in this case, is marked by long, often involved prose, into which is interjected a countless array of Svents. But despite all this the book emands attention, for it is the core of at least one virtue, and that is sheer honesty of spirit, which per- meates every part of the story and marks the man. I I Fiction -~..Poetry ..Travel Biography This Christmas we have the Largest and Finest Selection of GOOD BOOKS that it has ever been our privilege to display. HERE ARE TWO OF THE FOREMOST NEW 150OKS SEVEN PILLARS OF WISDOM By T. E. LAWRENCE Complete Edition - Illustrated Boxed for Christmas at Regular Price -$5.00 IT IS SO EASY TO FORGET - - - To have pictures made of your family, your children, or your pets and IT IS SO EASY to have it done at your own home with modern equipment - day or evening. SWAIN Home Photographer Phone 2-1924 713 East University 3 t 1 1 1 , z Dr. Dorsey covers most of the phases of personality and finds in his discussion many occasions for giv- ing good advice. Like most recent works in mental hygiene, the book gives more convincing arguments for the need of mental hygiene than material for supplying aids to attain normality. Its abstension from dog- matic statements and over-easy pre- scriptions for correcting all of the ills of the normal individual is re- freshing. The careful reader will be more impressed by the reticence of the writer than by his positive con- tributions. He will certainly not be led to accept any over-ready solu- tion of the problems of the abnormal mental life. The impression is left that the author has had much fruit- ful experience with abnormal indi- viduals and is not yet ready to for- mulate other than tentative solutions of the many problems offered by hem. THE WOOLLCOTT READER By ALEXANDER WOOLLCOTT A Unique Collection of Unusual Works found off the beaten track. $3.00 SLATER' S INC. 336 South State Phone 3814 i ;_ 11 _1 I) 3ID IDIlI&S5 AKE C-HRISTMAS +OPPINGESY A. 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