Frames of Mind: A Post-Jungian Look at Cinema, Television and Technology

Summary
The eminent psychologist Carl Jung is best known for such indelible contributions to modern thought as the concept of the collective unconscious, but his wide-spread work can also be fruitfully employed to analyze popular culture. Frames of Mind offers an introduction to the world of Post-Jungian film and television studies, examining how Jung’s theories can heighten our understanding of everything from Chinatown and Star Trek to advertisements.
In this illuminating psychoanalysis of our media environment, Luke Hockley probes questions such as why we have genuine emotional responses to film events we know to be fictional, why we are compulsively driven to watch television, and how advertisers use unconscious motifs to persuade viewers.
“A beautiful job! Hockley’s is a big screen approach, for he seeks to link Jungian and post-Jungian ideas about film with the sounds and images that flicker across everyone’s everyday experience. In this mixture of the formal and the informal, he performs an act of therapy for Jungian media criticism itself, rooting it (for its own good) in the popular and the ubiquitous. The process brings out aspects of Jung’s work on sexuality and the body that often get overlooked in academic circles.”—Andrew Samuels, Professor of Analytical Psychology, University of Essex
Similar Books
-
Provocative Therapy
by Frank Farrelly
-
Windows
by Jean-Bertrand Pontalis
-
-
-
-
A Compulsion for Antiquity: Freud and the Ancient World
by Richard H. Armstrong
-
Culturally Alert Counseling: A Comprehensive Introduction
by Garrett McAuliffe
-
Music, Archetype, and the Writer: A Jungian View
by Bettina L. Knapp
-
The Cure of Souls: Science, Values, and Psychotherapy
by Robert L. Woolfolk
-
Freud's Russia: National Identity in the Evolution of Psychoanalysis
by James L. Rice
-
Love and Hate in the Nursery and Beyond: Voices from the Unconscious
by Jule Eisenbud
-
The Makings of Maleness: Men, Women, and the Flight of Daedalus
by Peter Tatham
-
-
The Annual of Psychoanalysis, V. 32: Psychoanalysis and Women
by Jerome A. Winer
-
Freud on Sublimation: Reconsiderations
by Volney P. Gay
-
The Unconscious in Proust's a la Recherche Du Temps Perdu
by Robin Mackenzie
-
Transforming Psyche
by Barbara Weir Huber
-
From Fragmentation to Wholeness: The Black South African Family Under Seige
by Keith U.C. Appolis