ABSTRACT

Since its beginning, depth psychology has attempted to change the status quo of individual and cultural life by probing beneath surface appearances. Lyn Cowan explores a number of subjects, considering what possible meanings and implications for change might lie behind the conventional attitudes toward such subjects as:
* Abortion
* Gender and sexuality
* Language
* Memory
* Melancholy
The author puts forward the argument that, although "psychology" and "subversion" are not usually thought of as belonging together, they should be. Such a view, presented clearly with humour and insight, offers a way to think differently about usual things, and yield fresh meaning to some of the pressing dilemmas of our time and how we as individuals may respond to them.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter |15 pages

Tracking the White Rabbit

Notes on eccentricity (or, A quick tour with Alice through Wonderland)

chapter |11 pages

Feeding the psyche

Junk words and corn-fed music

chapter |6 pages

Women and the land

Imagination and reality

chapter |13 pages

“Taking The Dark With Open Eyes”

Hidden dimensions of a psychology of abortion

chapter |15 pages

Styx and stones

Hatred and the art of cursing

chapter |10 pages

The archetype of the victim

chapter |15 pages

Blue notes

Some reflections on melancholy