A Lost Track: On the Unconscious in Folklore

In this article Jeggle describes the opportunities that may have been lost for exploring the bridges between folkloristic and psychoanalytic scholarship. Using examples from folk belief and dreams, from the realm of mental illness and oracle interpretation, as well as from instances of forgetting an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of folklore research 2003-01, Vol.40 (1), p.73-94
Hauptverfasser: Jeggle, Utz, Bendix, John
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creator Jeggle, Utz
Bendix, John
description In this article Jeggle describes the opportunities that may have been lost for exploring the bridges between folkloristic and psychoanalytic scholarship. Using examples from folk belief and dreams, from the realm of mental illness and oracle interpretation, as well as from instances of forgetting and forms of appropriation, Jeggle seeks underlying linkages connecting the internal to the external world. Outlining interpretive paths largely left untrodden in German folklore scholarship, Jeggle suggests openings for further research.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Anthropology
Beliefs
Consciousness
Cultural studies
Desire
Diseases
Dreams
Folk literature
Folklore
Forgetting
Freud, Sigmund
Germany
Love
Mental illness
Oracles
Psychoanalysis
Psychoanalytic criticism
Psychological aspects
Reality
Religion
Scholarships
Superstitions
Umbrellas
Unconscious
Unconscious mind
Utz Jeggle's "A Lost Track"
title A Lost Track: On the Unconscious in Folklore
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