Bradley's Reviews > The Anatomy of Melancholy
The Anatomy of Melancholy
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by
Bradley's review
bookshelves: 2019-shelf, non-fiction, psychology, abandoned, traditional-fiction, self-help
Mar 03, 2019
bookshelves: 2019-shelf, non-fiction, psychology, abandoned, traditional-fiction, self-help
The penultimate Self-Help book. The medical man's history primer of Galen and Astrology. The completionist's guide to a completely exhaustive and exhausting compendium of (now) obscure references, to Latin, and frankly inexplicable inclusions.
If he went out of his way to design for us a perfect way to exhaust us with his knowledge of poverty, nobility, love, the Humors, the Galenic qualities of all kinds of foodstuffs, and do it with more in-text annotations than actual text, doing it all in that peculiar idiom common to any English text coming out before the advent of the DICTIONARY, then I think he succeeded. Admirably.
And let me tell you... Robert Burton defeated me.
He set out to give us the full wide range of depression in this academic treatise that fills to the height of 1620's modern medicine, stoops to the depths of hundreds of poetical sources, revolts us in explaining just HOW one might get depressed... and teaches us how to fight our own depression by making us come up with a thousand and one reasons why we ought to stop this FREAKING ENORMOUS BOOK and JUST STOP... thereby relieving our -- by now -- enormous melancholy.
I made it half-way through. I found myself negatively enjoying practically every new step in this amazingly long-winded treatise. I could not find a single aspect about it that made me want to continue.
Not the science, not the beginnings of psychology, not the weird historical curiosity.
I was defeated. I am sad to say, after 29 hours of Librivox and epub slogging, that I will now DNF.
Goodnight.
I may laugh myself to sleep. The relief is palpable.
If he went out of his way to design for us a perfect way to exhaust us with his knowledge of poverty, nobility, love, the Humors, the Galenic qualities of all kinds of foodstuffs, and do it with more in-text annotations than actual text, doing it all in that peculiar idiom common to any English text coming out before the advent of the DICTIONARY, then I think he succeeded. Admirably.
And let me tell you... Robert Burton defeated me.
He set out to give us the full wide range of depression in this academic treatise that fills to the height of 1620's modern medicine, stoops to the depths of hundreds of poetical sources, revolts us in explaining just HOW one might get depressed... and teaches us how to fight our own depression by making us come up with a thousand and one reasons why we ought to stop this FREAKING ENORMOUS BOOK and JUST STOP... thereby relieving our -- by now -- enormous melancholy.
I made it half-way through. I found myself negatively enjoying practically every new step in this amazingly long-winded treatise. I could not find a single aspect about it that made me want to continue.
Not the science, not the beginnings of psychology, not the weird historical curiosity.
I was defeated. I am sad to say, after 29 hours of Librivox and epub slogging, that I will now DNF.
Goodnight.
I may laugh myself to sleep. The relief is palpable.
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Reading Progress
May 6, 2013
– Shelved as:
to-read
May 6, 2013
– Shelved
February 28, 2019
–
Started Reading
March 3, 2019
– Shelved as:
2019-shelf
March 3, 2019
– Shelved as:
non-fiction
March 3, 2019
– Shelved as:
psychology
March 3, 2019
– Shelved as:
abandoned
March 3, 2019
– Shelved as:
traditional-fiction
March 3, 2019
– Shelved as:
self-help
March 3, 2019
–
Finished Reading
Comments Showing 1-8 of 8 (8 new)
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message 1:
by
Trish
(new)
Mar 04, 2019 04:00AM
FINALLY! I'm proud of you for DNFing the book, I really am.
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I know, I know. *pats Brad's shoulder* But at a certain point, there is only one thing left to do. *hands Brad matches*
I was really looking forward to reading this book but having read reviews, I am in two minds.
I am an impulsive person so looks like, starting is no guaranty of finishing, which I dont like !
Any advice :) ?
I am an impulsive person so looks like, starting is no guaranty of finishing, which I dont like !
Any advice :) ?
You must have a HUGE tolerance for things that appear to be science without actually being science. You must also be tolerant of massive amounts of info-dumping that require a vast encyclopedic knowledge of pre-Elizabethian pop culture.
I would have been quite happy if this had been an honestly true discourse on melancholy, with a rambling stream of consciousness, but this just defeated even my relatively vast interest levels.
MAYBE your mileage might vary. :)
I would have been quite happy if this had been an honestly true discourse on melancholy, with a rambling stream of consciousness, but this just defeated even my relatively vast interest levels.
MAYBE your mileage might vary. :)