ABSTRACT

The Archetypal Pan in America examines the complex moral and ethical dilemmas that Americans have had to face over the last few decades, including the motivations for the Vietnam War; who was in control of women’s productive rights; how to extend civil rights to all; protests for the historically unapologetic narrative of the genocide of Native Americans; and the growing number of school shootings since the Columbine massacre. Fontelieu suggests that the emotional pain these issues created has not resolved and that it continues to surface, in the guise of new issues, but with a similar dysfunctional pattern.

The book argues that this pattern acts in the culture in the same manner as a psychological defense system: stimulating fight, flight, or freeze reactions; requiring great stores of energy when activated; and deflecting attention from other areas. Relying on Jung’s theory of the applicability of myth to psychological problems and the post-Jungian theory of cultural complexes, the myths of the Greek god Pan are used to scaffold a metaphor that informs this pattern. Fontelieu proposes that, rather than looking inward as a culture for how to accept its changing role in a global world, this pattern reinforces dysfunctional emotional responses to the reoccurring traumas of modernity, responses such as an increase in the magnetic appeal of hypermasculinity, or choosing to remain naively self-absorbed.

The Archetypal Pan in America will be of great interest to Jungian analysts and scholars of depth psychology, as well as academics and postgraduate students studying psychology, foreign studies, literary criticism, politics and cultural studies.

chapter 1|24 pages

Pan stalks America

chapter 2|23 pages

Jungian theory

Complex, myth, and archetype

chapter 3|17 pages

The great god Pan is dead

chapter 4|22 pages

Mythos of Pan

Isolation, innocence, panic, and the battlefield

chapter 5|12 pages

Rites of healing and scapegoating in antiquity

Metamorphoses

chapter 7|26 pages

Random shootings

American reactions to the massacre at Columbine

chapter 8|17 pages

American reactions to 9/11

Panic and naiveté

chapter 9|9 pages

American apathy toward sexual violence

Rape in the military

chapter 10|10 pages

Panic stalks America