ND Magazine Home
Subscribe to Notre Dame Magazine
The mind of the blues

By John Monczunski

<Page 1 of 1>

One of the ways in which the blues may help people psychologically is the way in which it deals with grief, says Notre Dame psychology Professor Scott Monroe, who studies depression. "It offers a way of sharing adversity and hardship without imparting the feeling that someone is merely complaining."

Even though the English Renaissance philosopher and essayist never heard Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf or Bessie Smith, Monroe says Sir Francis Bacon understood the heart of the blues when he said: "But one thing is most admirable . . . which is that this communicating of a man's self to his friend works two contrary effects; for it redoubleth joys and cutteth grief in half. For there is no man that imparteth his griefs to his friend, but he groweth the less."


(April 2008)

<Page 1 of 1>

See Also:

Related Links For this Article:

Blues appeal

The theology blues

That blue note sound

A new twist on blues poetry

Blues poetry reading by Honoree Fanonne Jeffers

Pick of the WeekBook cover

Rough and Tumble: A Novel
by Mark Bavaro, Notre Dame class of 1985 (St. Martin's Press)

This gritty debut novel by the former Irish, Giants, Browns and Eagles player lays bare a brutal season in the life of Dominic Fucillo, an aging, rebellious, physically sore, professional football tight end for the New York Giants whose team faces a major scandal.

More