A Psychiatric Study of Myths and Fairy Tales: Their Origin, Meaning, and UsefulnessJulius E. Heuscher |
Contents
Chapter | 5 |
A Critique of Some Interpretations of Myths | 19 |
The Origin of Individuality Comments on | 28 |
Copyright | |
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adolescence ahrimanic Allerleirauh animal appears aspects aware basic beautiful become bewitched bird Briar Rose brothers Calaf castle challenges Chapter child Cinderella confrontation consciousness culture death dream earth epos Eros Eurystheus eventually everyday existence existential experience experienced expressed fairy tale fairy tales father Faust feelings folklore forces forest frog girl golden hair Goose Girl Grimms growth Hansel and Gretel harmonious Heracles hero hidden human Ilmarinen images individual instinctual integration intellect Kalevala king latency period later lead Lił material world meaning meaningful Mephistopheles mother myths and fairy narrations natural-scientific Nirvana oedipal original paradisiacal parents person physical world portrayal portrayed prince princess Psyche psychoanalytic recognize Red Cap relationship represents saga seen self-awareness sense serpent Seven Dwarfs sexual significance Sleeping Beauty Snow White soul spiritual stepmother stepsisters story superego symbol theme thinking tion tree Trickster Turandot unconscious various viewpoint witch woman world-design Yirik young