Western Rationality and the Angel of Dreams: Self, Psyche, Dreaming

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Rowman & Littlefield, 1999 - 171 páginas
Throughout recorded time people have been fascinated by dreams and their meanings. Tribal societies valorize knowledge obtained from dreams and respect possession as a channel for revelation. In contrast, implicit in Western intellectual thought is an image of the human as a non-social atom with a unitary and rational mind, which turns dreaming into an epiphenomenom or, for Freud, a neurosis in miniature. Integrating materials from anthropology, post-Freudian psychoanalysis, social evolution, and the social psychology of Mead, Cooley, James, and Sullivan, this book offers a view of the self and the psyche that provides meaning to the views of traditional peoples on dreams, possession, and the loss of self.
 

Contenido

Evolutionary and CrossCultural Perspectives on Dreaming and Social Life
3
Theoretical Perspectives on the Socialized Self
13
Losing or Multiplying the Self via Dreams or Trance
27
Joseph Freud and the Judaic Tradition
41
INTERPRETING AND MISINTERPRETING DREAMS FREUD BRINGS DREAMS INTO BIOMEDICINE
55
Coca Hypnotism and the Return of the Primitive
57
Who Are the Irmas? What Are Their Narratives?
65
Lost in a Strange City Doras Dreams Freuds Fantasies
93
CONCLUSIONS
117
Dreams within Human Group Life Western Rationality and the Angel of Dreams
119
The Magic of Learning and Teaching
139
Bibliography
147
Index
161
About the Author
165
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Murray L. Wax is professor emeritus at Washington University, St. Louis.

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