ABSTRACT

Rhetorical analysis of texts exposes plausible ‘truths’ and presumptions implied by the writer’s presentation. In this volume, Leslie Gardner analyses the master psychologist Jung, who claimed to be expert at uncovering personal, psychological truths. In his theoretical writings, his rhetoric reveals philosophical ramifications which bear strong similarities to those of the rhetorician of the 18th century, Italian philosopher Giambattista Vico.

This book is driven by an interest in arguing that it is possible to read Jung’s works easily enough when you have a set of precepts to go by. The paradox of scientific discovery being set out in Jung’s grotesque and arcane imagery begins to seem a startling and legitimate psychology for the 21st century.

It is time Jungian studies took on this most appropriate examination of analytical psychology. Bringing Vico to bear directly on Jung’s thought has only been cursorily attempted before although much alluded to. We find indeed that some of Jung’s ideas derive directly from rhetorical theory, and this volume proposes to highlight Jung’s innovations, and bring him into forefront of contemporary psychological thought. Rhetorical Investigations will be of interest to analysts and academics, and also to those studying philosophy and psychology.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

chapter |13 pages

Tensions

Psychoanalysis/rhetoric/science

chapter |6 pages

Jung's Rhetorical Stance

chapter |22 pages

Topical Invention and Tropes – Tools of the Imagination

Definitions and issues

chapter |12 pages

Psychological Types and Rhetorical Devices

Perspectives

chapter |18 pages

High Profile Representations – Metaphor and Metonymy

Jung, Vico and Ricoeur, phenomenological anthropology

chapter |20 pages

Affinities

Vico and Jung and the themes other scholars discover

chapter |23 pages

Word Association Tests and Deliberative Logic

Forensic Jung

chapter |2 pages

Concluding Remarks