TY - BOOK AU - Collins, Alfred 1943- TI - Fatherson; a self psychology of the archetypal masculine SN - 0-933029-75-6 AV - BF175.5.M37 C65 1993 PY - 1994/// CY - Wilmette, IL PB - Chiron Publications KW - Masculinity (Psychology) KW - FAST KW - Tales--Psychological Aspects KW - Literature--Psychological Aspects KW - Mythology--Psychological Aspects KW - Archetype (Psychology) KW - Fathers and Sons KW - Men--Psychology KW - Kohut, Heinz (1913-1981) KW - Beauty and the beast (Tale) KW - Bhagavadgita KW - Bly, Robert KW - Death KW - Freud, Sigmund. 1856-1939 KW - God KW - Hillman, James KW - Hinduism KW - Buddhism KW - Twain, Mark KW - Inden, Ronald B KW - Initiation Rites and Ceremonies KW - Iron John KW - Jung, Paul KW - Shakespeare, William. 1564-1616 : King Lear KW - King Archetype KW - Love--Psychological Aspects KW - Masculine Principle KW - Feminine Principle KW - Moore, Robert KW - Mother Archetype KW - Murder KW - Perry, John Weir KW - Psyche, Objective KW - Motion Pictures--Psychological Aspects KW - Dean, James, 1931-1955 KW - Dostoyevsky, Fyodor, 1821-1881 KW - Pirsig, Robert KW - Father Archetype KW - Johnson, Lyndon KW - Balder (Norse deity) N1 - Kohut, Heinz : Fatherson mutuality: Kohut and the self object, p25-48.. Twain, Mark : The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn : see index.. Film : Rebel Without A Cause : p2.. Pirsig, Robert : Zen and The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance : see index.. Caro, Robert : The Years of Lyndon Johnson : p114-19, 121-22.. Balder (The Word) : see index under Baldr; 1. The archetypes' contested self. 2. Fatherson mutuality: Kohut and the Selfobject. 3. Psychoanalytic fathers and their sons. 4. cross-bodying: Anima and Fatherson as complementary archetypes of consciousness. 5. the failed father: old reprobates and their sons. 6. Fatherson and the King. 7. de/centering and cultural cannibalism. 8. initiating the Father through death. 9. toward an archetypal Self psychology N2 - 'In the modern postindustrial West, discord and neglect seem increasingly to dominate the father-son relationship, to the point that for many men the father-son bond has been disrupted, or was never adequately formed in the first place.' ER -