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Index
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I
1 The Inner World of Trauma in its Diabolical Form
Jung and dissociation
Clinical example: the axeman
Mrs. Y. and the shotgunner
Mary and the food daimon
2 Further Clinical Illustrations of the Self-Care System
The little girl and the angel
Lenore and the fairy godmother
Gustav and his heavenly parents
Kaye and her dolphins
Patricia and the ghost-child: when the spirit returns to the body
Psychosomatic illness and the self-care system
3 Freud and Jung's Dialogue about Trauma's Inner World
Janet and the inner daimons
Trauma and Freud's discovery of psychical reality
The seduction theory
Jung's complex theory and trauma
The lady who lived on the moon
Trauma and the transpersonal in unconscious fantasy
Jung and Freud on the psyche's daimonic resistance to healing
Freud and the daimonic defenses of the unconscious
4 Jung's Contributions to a Theory of The Self-Care System
Jung's trauma and Atmavictu
Jung's mature thought on trauma
Jung and the attacking “mind”
Jung's duplex Self: tight and dark
Yahweh and the dark side of the Self
5 Additional Jungian Contributions
Erich Neumann and the distress ego of trauma
The London School and archetypal defenses
American Jungians
Popularized versions
6 Psychoanalytic Theory about the Self-Care System
Edmund Bergler and the self-damaging “daimonion”
Odier and the malevolent/benevolent “great beings”
Sandor Ferenczi and the caretaker self's transpersonal wisdom
Object-relations theorists
Part II
Introduction to Part II: Fairy Tales and the Two-Stage Incarnation of the Self
Transitional processes between the human and divine
Psychology's developmental questions
Transitional processes in fairy tales
Two-stage healing of the split in fairy tales
7 Rapunzel and the Self-Care System
Rapunzel patients
Rapunzel: part 1
Rapunzel: part 2
Rapunzel: part 5
Rapunzel: part 4
8 Psyche and Her Daimon-Lover
Eros and Psyche: part 1
Eros as daimon
Daimonic protection vs. imprisonment
The daimonic as jailer
The daimon-lover and fantasy
Fantasy as a defense against the symbolic
Individuation and the tug of reality
Eros and Psyche: part 2
Rage and the resistance to incarnation
Voluntary sacrifice and embodiment
Joy and the human/divine relationship
9 Fitcher's Bird and the Dark Side of the Self
Fitcher's Bird
The story: part 1
Love and aggression in the evolution of the healthy ego: Winnicott
Clinical example
The dual nature of sacrifice in the transformation of the self-care system
Fitcher's Bird: part 2
Overcoming the wizard with the symbol
10 Prince Lindworm and Transformation of the Daimonic Through Sacrifice and Choice
Prince Lindworm: the story
The motif of the child and childlessness
Refusal to choose
The melancholic world of fantasy in the self care system
Julia Kristeva and the “black sun”
Excursus on the defensive uses of the numinous
Prince Lindworm as a twin
The worm-prince and the king or queen/baby dyad
Shepherd's daughter and crone as positive dyad of the Self
Rage and the transformation of Prince Lindworm
A moment of compassion
Concluding remarks
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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