Melville's Moby Dick; a Jungian commentary; an American Nekyia
Edinger, Edward F.
Melville's Moby Dick; a Jungian commentary; an American Nekyia - NY New Directions c1975, 1976, 1978 - 150p; bibliog.; glossary - (New directions book) .
Art-Psychology : passim.. Symbolism of Bible : Ishmael, p15ff; Jonah, p36; Christ, p64+; Ahab, p49ff; Moses, p51; Satan, p111-20; Tower of Babel, Pentecost, p126; Rachel, p133; Job, p141., passim.. Descent To Underworld : p19ff.. Alienation, Psychic : p19ff.. Shadow In Literature : p24-35.. Jonah : p36-41.. Symbolism of Whale : passimp72ff.. Functions, Psychological : p44ff.. Symbolism of Lamed One : p53ff.. Mythology-Interpretation : Osiris, p61; Prometheus, p63; Perseus, p93; Eros, p115.. Symbolism of White : p79-89.. Monsters : p89-96.. Perseus : p92-96.. Symbolism of Center : p102-10.. Devil : p111-20.. Symbolism of Numbers : The number 40, p135; the number 3, p137-39., p135.. Symbolism of Spiral : p138. Pub. simult. in Toronto by McLelland & Stewart. Earlier version in ``Quadrant'' Nos. 17; v8, no.1; v9, no. 1; v9, no. 2 (1975-77).
1 Introduction. 2 Melville the man. 3 Ishmael, the alienated one. 4 Queegqueg, the primitive shadow. 5 The sign of Jonah. 6 The nekyia begins. 7 Captain Ahab. 8 Ahab and mythology. 9 The meaning of the whale. 10 The whiteness of the whale. 11 The whale as sphinx and medusa. 12 Fedallah, the avenging angel. 13 Linked analogies. 14 The pact with the devil. 15 Encounter with numinosum. 16 Transformation. 17 Death and rebirth
'...Edinger has applied the principles of Jungian analysis to the novel which perhaps more than any other is fully engendered of the American psyche, Herman Melville's Moby Dick. Central to this penetrating commentary is the concept of nekyia, a term borrowed from the Odyssey of Homer, signifying a descent to the underworld--that is, an encounter with the collective unconscious.'
Hardcover
0-8112-0690-4
78-6146
Moby Dick (Melville, Herman)
Jung, C. G. (Carl Gustav), 1875-1961
Psychological fiction, American
Psychology
Subconsciousness in literature
Voyages to the otherworld in literature
Melville, Herman, 1819-1891
Melville's Moby Dick; a Jungian commentary; an American Nekyia - NY New Directions c1975, 1976, 1978 - 150p; bibliog.; glossary - (New directions book) .
Art-Psychology : passim.. Symbolism of Bible : Ishmael, p15ff; Jonah, p36; Christ, p64+; Ahab, p49ff; Moses, p51; Satan, p111-20; Tower of Babel, Pentecost, p126; Rachel, p133; Job, p141., passim.. Descent To Underworld : p19ff.. Alienation, Psychic : p19ff.. Shadow In Literature : p24-35.. Jonah : p36-41.. Symbolism of Whale : passimp72ff.. Functions, Psychological : p44ff.. Symbolism of Lamed One : p53ff.. Mythology-Interpretation : Osiris, p61; Prometheus, p63; Perseus, p93; Eros, p115.. Symbolism of White : p79-89.. Monsters : p89-96.. Perseus : p92-96.. Symbolism of Center : p102-10.. Devil : p111-20.. Symbolism of Numbers : The number 40, p135; the number 3, p137-39., p135.. Symbolism of Spiral : p138. Pub. simult. in Toronto by McLelland & Stewart. Earlier version in ``Quadrant'' Nos. 17; v8, no.1; v9, no. 1; v9, no. 2 (1975-77).
1 Introduction. 2 Melville the man. 3 Ishmael, the alienated one. 4 Queegqueg, the primitive shadow. 5 The sign of Jonah. 6 The nekyia begins. 7 Captain Ahab. 8 Ahab and mythology. 9 The meaning of the whale. 10 The whiteness of the whale. 11 The whale as sphinx and medusa. 12 Fedallah, the avenging angel. 13 Linked analogies. 14 The pact with the devil. 15 Encounter with numinosum. 16 Transformation. 17 Death and rebirth
'...Edinger has applied the principles of Jungian analysis to the novel which perhaps more than any other is fully engendered of the American psyche, Herman Melville's Moby Dick. Central to this penetrating commentary is the concept of nekyia, a term borrowed from the Odyssey of Homer, signifying a descent to the underworld--that is, an encounter with the collective unconscious.'
Hardcover
0-8112-0690-4
78-6146
Moby Dick (Melville, Herman)
Jung, C. G. (Carl Gustav), 1875-1961
Psychological fiction, American
Psychology
Subconsciousness in literature
Voyages to the otherworld in literature
Melville, Herman, 1819-1891