Psychology and MythRobert Alan Segal Taylor & Francis, 1996 - 396 páginas First Published in 1996. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company. |
Contenido
Volume Introduction xiii | 1 |
Mythology Folklore and Psychoanalysis | 25 |
The Symbol without Meaning | 33 |
Towards a Revitalized Psychoanalytic | 99 |
The Psychology of Mythology | 128 |
Jung and His Critics | 141 |
Creation of the Mythopoeic Male | 154 |
Typical Dreams | 174 |
Sibling Rivalry the Oedipus Complex and Myth | 181 |
Jung on Myth and the Mythic | 197 |
The Psychology of the Child Archetype | 211 |
Folklore and Psychology | 246 |
Complex and Myth in MotherRight | 272 |
Introduction to The Origins and History of Consciousness | 295 |
The Garden of Eden | 345 |
Términos y frases comunes
American Folklore animals anthropologists appears archetype become birth brother C. G. Jung castration castration anxiety child child archetype collective unconscious concept conscious mind culture Dahomean daughter death divine dragon dream Earth Diver earth-diver ego psychology Engidu ethnographic explain fact fantasy father fire folklorists Freud Freudian function Gilgamesh gods hero Herskovitses human hunter husband incest Indian individual interpretation Journal Jung Jung's kills king legend living magic male maṇḍala material matrilineal Maui Mawu meaning mental Michichi mother motif motive mythical mythology narrative nature Neolithic Oedipus complex Ojibwa origin Ortnit phantasy primitive psyche psychic psychoanalytic psychology Reference footnote relation religion represents Róheim Segbo serpent sexual shaman Sigmund Freud significance sister skull social society Sogbo structure Super-Ego symbol tale theme theory tion tradition tree Trobriands uncon University wife Wife's Head wish woman York