ABSTRACT

Intergenerational Complexes in Analytical Psychology: The Suffering of Ghosts draws attention to human suffering and how it relates to unacknowledged and unrecognized traumatic cultural histories that continue to haunt us in the present. The book shows the many ways that our internal lives are organized and patterned by both racial, ethnic, and national identities, and personal experiences.

This book shows how the cultural unconscious with its multiple group dynamics, identities, nationalities, seething differences of conflicts, polarizations, and individual personalities are organized by cultural complexes and narrated by archetypal story formations, which the author calls phantom narratives. The emotional dynamics generated constitute potential transitional spaces or holding containers that allow us to work with these issues psychologically at both the individual and group levels, offering opportunities for healing. The chapters of the book provide numerous examples of the applications of these terms to natural and cultural catastrophes as well as expressions as uncanny phenomena.

Intergenerational Complexes in Analytical Psychology is essential reading for analytical psychologists, Jungian psychotherapists, and other professionals seeking to understand the impact of intergenerational trauma on individuals and groups. It is also relevant to the work of academics and scholars of Jungian studies, sociology, trauma studies, politics, and social justice.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 3|6 pages

Phantoms at the cultural level

chapter Chapter 4|13 pages

Unbearable things, unseen

chapter Chapter 5|14 pages

Phantom narratives and the uncanny in cultural life

Psychic presences and their shadows

chapter Chapter 6|8 pages

Between the world and me

Where the wild things live

chapter Chapter 8|10 pages

James Baldwin and Toni Morrison

Othering through racialized intersubjectivities