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About the Author

David M. Black is a Fellow of the British Psychoanalytic Society/Institute of Psychoanalysis and a founder member of the Foundation for Psychotherapy and Counselling (WPF). He works in London. He has written and lectured widely on science, religion and consciousness studies and is the editor of show more Psychoanalysis and Religion in the 2lst Century: Competitors or Collaborators? (Routledge, 2006). show less
Disambiguation Notice:

The same person is both psychoanalyst and poet. Publishes as D. M. Black as a poet and David M. Black as a psychoanalyst.

Works by D. M. Black

Associated Works

British Poetry Since 1945 (1970) — Contributor, some editions — 192 copies, 2 reviews
Emergency Kit (1996) — Contributor, some editions — 121 copies, 1 review
Holding your eight hands; an anthology of science fiction verse (1970) — Contributor — 25 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Black, David MacLeod
Other names
Black, David M.
Birthdate
1941-11-08
Gender
male
Education
University of Edinburgh
Westminster Pastoral Foundation
Occupations
psychoanalyst
poet
Awards and honors
Fellow of the British Psychoanalytic Society
Nationality
UK
South Africa
Birthplace
South Africa
Places of residence
London, England, UK
Wiltshire, England, UK
South Africa
Malawi
Tanzania
Scotland, UK
Disambiguation notice
The same person is both psychoanalyst and poet. Publishes as D. M. Black as a poet and David M. Black as a psychoanalyst.
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

1 review
The three male, British poets in this classic collection are all quite distinguished (D.M. Thomas is better known as a novelist than a poet; Scottish writer D.M. Black is a well-known psychotherapist in his day-job), but maybe I was reading it at the wrong moment, none of them really grabbed me. The pieces included here from Black and Redgrove are mainly in a surrealist vein, something that perhaps worked better in 1968 than half a century later, and the same probably goes for D M Thomas's show more science-fiction lyrics. Very David Bowie...

I quite enjoyed Black's long poem "Without equipment", which slides into nonsense language and then back to normal speech, and Redgrove's Wordsworthian lyric, "The Force", but there wasn't much else that stuck with me on a first reading.
show less

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Alan Spain Cover photograph
Nelson Christmas Cover photograph

Statistics

Works
12
Also by
3
Members
76
Popularity
#233,521
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
1
ISBNs
18

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