ABSTRACT

Anteros: A Forgotten Myth explores how the myth of Anteros disappears and reappears throughout the centuries, from classical Athens to the present day, and looks at how the myth challenges the work of Freud, Lacan, and Jung, among others. It examines the successive cultural experiences that formed and inform the myth and also how the myth sheds light on individual human experience and the psychoanalytic process.

Topics of discussion include:

  • Anteros in the Italian Renaissance, the French Enlightenment and English Modernism
  • psychologizing Anteros: Freud, Lacan, Girard, and Jung
  • three anterotic moments in a consulting room.

This book presents an important argument at the boundaries of the disciplines of analytical psychology, psychoanalysis, art history, and mythology. It will therefore be essential reading for all analytical psychologists and psychoanalysts as well as art historians and those with an interest in the meeting of psychoanalytic thought and mythology.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

On a forgotten myth

chapter Chapter 1|14 pages

Resident alien

Anteros in classical Greek and Roman settings

chapter Chapter 2|16 pages

La Récupération

Anteros in the Italian Renaissance

chapter Chapter 3|10 pages

Anteros as Contr’amour in the French Enlightenment

chapter Chapter 4|12 pages

Chthonic Anteros in the French Romantic cosmology

chapter Chapter 5|16 pages

Anteros at the threshold of English Modernism

chapter Chapter 6|16 pages

Contemporary artists of the anterotic

chapter Chapter 7|21 pages

Psychologizing Anteros

Freud, Lacan, Girard

chapter Chapter 8|13 pages

Psychologizing Anteros

Jung

chapter Chapter 9|1 pages

Three anterotic moments in a consulting room

chapter Chapter 10|4 pages

An open end

Anteros as a more visible mystery