Experts
Kay Redfield Jamison
Professor of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Big Think sits with the Professor of Psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University and author of “Nothing Was the Same.” Read More
The classic understanding of suicide casts it as reactionary measure against a particular event or outcome, but Kay Redfield Jamison argues that it is typically the result of the prolonged pain that comes with mental illness. Read More
The author and professor of psychiatry, discusses the idea of death and her fear of 'frittering away time.' Read More
After waking up from a coma after a suicide attempt, Kay Redfield Jamison realized that medication was her only remaining choice. Read More
What happens when life loses any semblance of stability and one is subject to waves of cosmic and sometimes terrifying hallucinations? For Kay Redfield Jamison, a clinically bipolar professor of psychiatry and a mental health expert, this uneasy consciousness was a way of life. Read More
Kay Jamison explains her willingness to discuss her husband's last years, and how she was helped through her own grief by the work of other writers. Read More
Kay Redfield Jamison discusses how she and her late husband found profound delight in his final years as well as the commanding power of the grieving process. Read More
About Kay Redfield Jamison
Kay Redfield Jamison is a Professor of Psychiatry at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, where she also do-directs the Mood Center. Once a manic depressive herself, she is now a prominent expert on mental health, suicide, and creativity.
Her books include Touched With Fire: Manic Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament; An Unquiet Mind; Exuberance: A Passion For Life; and Nothing Was The Same.