ABSTRACT
Drawing on the author’s own experiences as a psychiatrist-psychotherapist, this fascinating new book gathers and analyzes folktales from around the world about adults struggling with conflicts and trying to determine truth. These narratives illustrate how storytelling is crucial to the process of reconciliation.
The stories included within this book feature both familiar and forgotten ones: e.g., "The Fisherman and the Djinn" from Arabia; "Why the Platypus Is Special" from Australia; the Native American, "How Nanapush Brought the Peace Pipe to the People," and the ancient Greek tale of "Baucis and Philemon". The anthology retells the tales and discusses them in terms of psychological and spiritual development - the role of individuation and wisdom in reconciling disputes. The tales reveal astonishing cross-cultural similarities about how to do so, and directly apply to many modern dilemmas. Particularly important is a new paradigm of truth and transformation illustrated by long overlooked tales of the Greek Muses.
The Muses of Truth and Transformation draws on Chinen's research in adult cognitive, emotional, and spiritual development. The new perspective will appeal to Jungian analysts, psychotherapists, as well as students of psychology, mythology, and epistemology.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|36 pages
Timeless Storytelling and Contemporary Wisdom
chapter Chapter 2|7 pages
Storytelling and Modes of Comprehension
chapter Chapter 4|8 pages
Why Comprehension Modes Are Cross-Cultural
part II|24 pages
Comprehension Modes in Operation
chapter Chapter 7|8 pages
The Development of Comprehension Modes
chapter Chapter 8|6 pages
Structures of Creation and Comprehension
part III|28 pages
Comprehension, Truth, and Transformation
part IV|60 pages
Judging Multiple Modes of Truth
