Jung's wandering archetype : race and religion in analytical psychology /
Saved in:
Author / Creator: | Dohe, Carrie B., author. |
---|---|
Imprint: | Abingdon, Oxon ; New York : Routledge, 2016. |
Description: | xi, 266 pages ; 24 cm |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/10827190 |
Table of Contents:
- 1. "Something like Wotan"?
- 2. "Because we Germanic people still have a genuine barbarian in us: On Ancient Ethnographers, Humanist Thinkers, and Modern Theorists of Primitive Religion, or Where Jung Got His Ideas
- 3. A "far finer and more comprehensive task for psychoanalysis": Science, Religion, and Self-Redemption in Analytical Psychology
- 4. The "paleontology of the soul": The Concept of Primitivity and Jung's Theory of the Stratified Phylogenetic Unconscious
- 5. "Baldr comes home": From the Paleontology of the Soul to the Invention of a Germanic Mythology
- 6. Wotan and "the archetypal Ergriffenheit": A Tragedy in Three Parts
- 7. "After the Catastrophe": Wandering Diagnoses and Changing Relationships Post-"Wotan"
- 8. The "most complicated psychology": The reception of Analytical Psychology in Contemporary Heathenism
- 9. Conclusion: "man as he was - and will always be"? Racial Essentialism, Scientific Discourse, and New Spiritualities