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Literature Criticism
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From: Hispanofila[(essay date September 1978) In the following essay, Predmore offers a Jungian interpretation of Saint Emmanuel the Good, Martyr.] Critics have generally agreed that San Manuel Bueno, mártir, besides culminating...
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From: Scandinavian Studies[(essay date winter 2001) In the following essay, Chase maintains that although Grundtvig's interpretation of the Norse myths changed over time to reflect his evolution as a scholar, his basic theory of myth remained...
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From: Virginia Quarterly Review[In the following essay, O'Hara reviews The Essential Jung.] Along with Sigmund Freud and Alfred Adler, Carl Gustav Jung (1875–1961) was a schoolmaster of what none of them would have called philosophical psychology....
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From: The New York Review of Books[In the following essay, Dinnage reviews books on Jung.] Last year marked Jung's centenary, and Freud's is already twenty years past; yet these two, who evolved so inevitably from a century of preoccupation with the...
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From: Bulletin of the History of Medicine[(essay date 1950) In the following lecture, originally delivered in 1949, Galdston describes Paracelsus as the father of modern psychiatry. In a time when scientists were beginning to separate the “how” from the “why,”...
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From: The New York Review of Books[In the following essay, Rycroft reviews Analytical Psychology: Its Theory and Practice.] This volume makes available the text of five lectures which Jung gave, in English, to the Institute of Medical Psychology (the...
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From: The New York Review of Books[In the following essay, MacIntyre reviews Jung's Man and His Symbols.] One of the least remarked characteristics of the thought of C. G. Jung is its almost total lack of cultural context. The history of Jung's...
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From: Once upon a Time: Myth, Fairy Tales and Legends in Margaret Atwood’s Writings[(essay date 2008) In the following essay, Appleton discusses Atwood’s dystopian novel Oryx and Crake, which offers an apocalyptic portrait of human extinction. She notes Atwood’s claim that the events in the novel are...
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From: The New Republic[In the following essay, Philipson reviews Man and His Symbols.] It might be illuminating if some day the story of intellectual life in the 20th Century were written metaphorically in the language of social, political,...
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From: Journal of Evolutionary Psychology[(essay date 1996) In the following essay, Tucker draws parallels between Troilus and Cressida and Torquato Tasso’s epic poem La Gerusalemme liberata (1581; Jerusalem Delivered) by applying Carl Jung’s theory of four...
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From: Patrick White: A General Introduction[(essay date 1976) In the following essay, originally published in Swedish in 1973, Björksten explores the influence of Carl Jung on White. He argues that “Jungian influence on White is limited and most strongly...
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From: Studies in the Humanities[(essay date June 2005) In the following essay, Murillo explores Charlotte Dacre's use of multiple doubles in Zofloya to epitomize the complexities of living as a marginalized person within Victorian society, as both a...
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From:MACLAS Latin American EssaysIn a letter dated March 25, 1998 from the Pontifical Council for Inter-religious Dialogue, Vatican City, to the Presidents of the Episcopal Conferences of Africa and of Madagascar, the pastoral began by saying that,...
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From:Mosaic: A journal for the interdisciplinary study of literature (Vol. 26, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedA comparison of an opera by Sylvano Bussotti, 'L'ispirazione,' a story by Ernst Bloch, 'Die gutmachende Muse' and a romance by Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton, 'Zononi' reveal the complexities associated with the theories of...
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From:Arab Studies Quarterly (Vol. 43, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThis paper provides a Jungian interpretation of the frame story of 1001 Nights. Using a psychodynamic approach, the key characters in the frame story are considered as different pieces of the female psyche during the...
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From:European Judaism (Vol. 55, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedSabina Spielrein was a Russian psychoanalyst who worked in Zurich, Berlin, Geneva, Moscow and Rostov-on-Don. She influenced many well-known thinkers in psychoanalysis and psychology, including Jung, Freud, Piaget,...
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From:Spectator (Vol. 309, Issue 9413)Over the Christmas holiday I read a collection of essays edited by Carl Jung, Man and His Symbols, which Jung kicks off with an essay entitled 'The Importance of Dreams'. Dreams ought to be taken seriously, says Jung....
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From:James Dickey Review (Vol. 30, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedJames Dickey used writing to express himself as a metaphysical and mythological poet. His works, as with most writers, reflect his own personal growth and transformation. Throughout his poetry and novels, Dickey strung...
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From:Journal of Romance Studies (Vol. 12, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis article focuses on 'El Etnografo' ['The Anthropologist' (di Giovanni trans.)], a brief and deceptively simple tale from Borges' Elogio de la sombra (1969) [In Praise of Darkness (1975)]. The tale's protagonist,...
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From:Journal of European Studies (Vol. 26, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedCarl Gustav Jung had always considered himself as a follower of Kantian philosophy even if his works did not conform to his beliefs. Jung frequently associates his psychological propositions with the precepts of Kantian...