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Witches, Ogres, and The Devil's Daughter: Encounters with Evil in Fairy Tales

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This collection of essays provides a handbook of Jungian thought on the destructive apsects of human nature, as well as an introduction to the use of archetypal fairy tale motifs in psychoanalytic practice. The cursed maiden, the bewitched princess, the sadistic husband and the wicked witch are among the figures that embody anger, aggression and other familiar behaviour patterns that block or destroy human relationships. The authors show how fairy tales can help us to recognize and deal with these forms of evil in our lives. The first part summarizes the basic approaches to fairy-tale interpretation taken by Jungian psychology and the second part presents and interprets specific tales from the Grimms' and other European collections.

272 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1992

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About the author

Mario Jacoby

18 books10 followers
Mario Jacoby was a training analyst, lecturer and member of the Curatorium of the C. G. Jung Institute in Küsnacht and of ISAPZURICH, founded in 2004. His other books include Shame and the Origins of Self-Esteem and Jungian Psychotherapy and Contemporary Infant Research (both Routledge).

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May 9, 2016
Too bad I've abandoned the psychoanalytic perspective for my thesis, or all these C.G. Jung Foundation books would be extremely useful...
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