The innateness of myth : a new interpretation of Joseph Campbell's reception of C.G. Jung
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Bibliographic Information
The innateness of myth : a new interpretation of Joseph Campbell's reception of C.G. Jung
(Continuum advances in religious studies)
Continuum, c2009
- : hb
- : pbk
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Note
Bibliography: p. [214]-219
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
: hb ISBN 9781441151124
Description
Joseph Campbell (1904-1988) was one of the most well-known and popular scholars of myth and comparative religion of the twentieth century. His work, however, has never fully received the same amount of scholarly interest and critical reflection that some of his contemporaries have received. In this book, based on extensive research in the Joseph Campbell Archive in Santa Barbara, Ritske Rensma shows that reflecting on C.G. Jung's influence on Campbell greatly furthers our understanding of these ideas, and that once this goal is achieved it becomes obvious that Campbell was a scholar whose ideas are still of significance today. Following Jung's lead, Campbell put great emphasis on the innate structures of the mind, an approach which pre-echoes the current 'evolutionary turn' in fields such as cognitive theory, psychology, psychiatry and neurobiology. This study will therefore not just be of interest to students and scholars interested in psychological approaches to the study of religion as well as Jung and Campbell, but also to those with an interest in recent developments in the above-mentioned fields
Table of Contents
- Introduction. Jung's influence on Campbell
- Overview
- Methodological reflection
- What this book aims to achieve
- Part 1 - Jung
- 1 The development of Jung's ideas about the concept of the archetype
- Early developments
- "On the nature of the psyche"
- Synchronicity
- 2 The Ideas of Anthony Stevens
- Ideas expressed in the book "Archetype Revisited"
- Steven's take on Jung's ideas about religion
- Conclusion
- Part 2 Campbell
- 3 Campbell's Life
- Boyhood and student years
- Development of core ideas
- Professional career
- 4 Phase One and Two of Campbell's Career
- Which books by Jung did Campbell own?
- Phase one (1944-1959)
- Phase two (1959-1968)
- 5 Phase Three of Campbell's Life
- 6 Conclusion
- The model of the three phases: a summary
- Overview and close analysis of my most important arguments
- Campbell as a 'post-Jungian'
- Reflections on the potential benefits of my findings
- Appendix I
- Bibliography.
- Volume
-
: pbk ISBN 9781441175670
Description
Joseph Campbell (1904-1988) was one of the most well-known and popular scholars of myth and comparative religion of the twentieth century. His work, however, has never fully received the same amount of scholarly interest and critical reflection that some of his contemporaries have received. In this book, based on extensive research in the Joseph Campbell Archive in Santa Barbara, Ritske Rensma shows that reflecting on C.G. Jung's influence on Campbell greatly furthers our understanding of these ideas, and that once this goal is achieved it becomes obvious that Campbell was a scholar whose ideas are still of significance today. Following Jung's lead, Campbell put great emphasis on the innate structures of the mind, an approach which pre-echoes the current 'evolutionary turn' in fields such as cognitive theory, psychology, psychiatry and neurobiology. This study will therefore not just be of interest to students and scholars interested in psychological approaches to the study of religion as well as Jung and Campbell, but also to those with an interest in recent developments in the above-mentioned fields
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Jung's influence on Campbell
- Overview
- Methodological reflection
- What this book aims to achieve
- Part 1- Jung
- 1 The development of Jung's ideas about the concept of the archetype
- Early developments
- "On the nature of the psyche"
- Synchronicity
- 2 The Ideas of Anthony Stevens
- Ideas expressed in the book "Archetype Revisited"
- Steven's take on Jung's ideas about religion
- Conclusion
- Part 2 Campbell
- 3 Campbell's Life
- Boyhood and student years
- Development of core ideas
- Professional career
- 4 Phase One and Two of Campbell's Career
- Which books by Jung did Campbell own?
- Phase one (1944-1959)
- Phase two (1959-1968)
- 5 Phase Three of Campbell's Life
- 6 Conclusion
- The model of the three phases: a summary
- Overview and close analysis of my most important arguments
- Campbell as a 'post-Jungian'
- Reflections on the potential benefits of my findings
- Appendix I
- Bibliography.
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