ABSTRACT

Claudette Kulkarni explores lesbian experience from a Jungian and feminist perspective, through interviews with women who see themselves as lesbians or who are in a lesbian relationship.
Although a feminist treatment of the subject challenges the heterosexism of Jungian theory, the author presents a link between theory and experience that is consistent with both approaches.
She concludes that when a woman finds herself loving another woman she is often responding to a profound psychological instinct to act, in spite of internal conflict or external opposition, and that this is a significant move in the service of personal and collective individuation and a movement toward achieving self-understanding

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter |9 pages

Personal confessions

chapter |5 pages

“Paula”

chapter |37 pages

Foregrounding my horizons

chapter |8 pages

“Ann”

chapter |8 pages

“Eileen”

chapter |10 pages

“Sandra”

chapter |21 pages

Weaving a research design

Feminism, Gadamerian hermeneutics, and Jungian practice

chapter |8 pages

“Joan”

Feminism, Gadamerian hermeneutics, and Jungian practice

chapter |34 pages

Hermeneutics as methodology

chapter |10 pages

“Nancy”