In praise of the manual-mental “loop-de-looping we call language.”
The late, great neurologist and poetic science writer Oliver Sacks spent his entire life writing only by hand — an act he considered “an indispensable form of talking to [oneself].” In his wonderful reflection on the psychology of writing and what his poet-friend Thom Gunn taught him about creativity, Sacks observed how “ideas emerge, are shaped, in the act of writing.”
This singular interplay between the manual and the...
Published on January 14, 2020 18:46