Psyche and Eros
In Psyche and Eros, first published in 1994, Gisela Labouvie-Vief describes historical and current concepts of mind and development, drawing from disciplines as diverse as philosophy, mythology, religion, literature, and psychology. She then presents a powerful theory of the maturing of mind, which brings together her empirical work and her exploration into mythology. The classical Greek myth of the gods Psyche and Eros serves as an evocative illustration of the author's theory. Psyche and Eros asserts that the core experience of development differs along gender lines. Rationality is regarded as masculine, while imagination is viewed as feminine. Competition between 'masculine' and 'feminine' parts of the mind has limited our ability to describe the mind and its development over the life course, just as it limits our experiences of development as men and women. The author suggests that we overcome the dualistic way of thinking about mind, and see how rationality and imagination can complement each other.
- Discussion of gender differences is hot topic, especially in women's studies
- Author is highly regarded, does a great deal of speaking
- Intertwining of myth, psychology, and history done by an academic is unusual
Product details
August 1994Paperback
9780521468244
346 pages
229 × 152 × 20 mm
0.51kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1. Prelude
- Part I. The Mind Divided:
- 2. The rage of Aphrodite: the vertical mind
- 3. The marriage of death: ascent and loss in development
- 4. Night and day: reason and gender
- Part II. The Mind Restored:
- 5. Knife and lamp: Mythos rediscovered
- 6. Psyche's trials: the transformation of desire
- 7. Postlude: the sacred marriage
- Notes
- References.