“一个土著儿子的笔记”

IF 0.1 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Jung Journal-Culture & Psyche Pub Date : 2022-07-03 DOI:10.1080/19342039.2022.2088997
Ryan B. Feemster
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本文运用荣格原理分析了美国黑人男性意识的三种文化情结:孤儿情结、流放情结和隐形情结。作者运用孤儿的原型形象来更好地解释美国黑人男性对其在美国遭受创伤的集体心理反应。作者指出,美国黑人最初的文化创伤是他们从非洲被绑架以建立奴隶制,这引发了内部创伤反应,认为流亡/脱离“黑人文化”、隐形和压迫的内化是他们继续生存的必要复合体。在这篇文章中,作者用了大量的个人叙事来捕捉一位美国黑人男性在与一个他历史上认为自己是外国人的社会作斗争时,为真实自我而进行的英雄之旅。
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“Notes of a Native Son”
ABSTRACT This autoethnographic manuscript uses Jungian principles to analyze three cultural complexes of Black American masculine consciousness: the orphan, exile, and invisibility complexes. The author applies the archetypal image of the orphan to better explain the collective psychic response of the Black American male to his traumatic reception in the United States. The author notes the original cultural trauma for Black Americans was their abduction from Africa for the institution of slavery, begetting the internal trauma responses that deemed exile/departure from “Black culture,” invisibility, and the internalization of oppression to be necessary complexes for their continued survival. Within this article, the author uses much of his personal narrative to capture a Black American male’s heroic journey for his true self while battling a society in which he historically felt a foreigner.
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来源期刊
Jung Journal-Culture & Psyche
Jung Journal-Culture & Psyche HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
36
期刊介绍: Jung Journal: Culture & Psyche is an international quarterly published by the C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco, one of the oldest institutions in America dedicated to Jungian studies and analytic training. Founded in 1979 by John Beebe under the title The San Francisco Jung Institute Library Journal, Jung Journal has evolved from a local journal of book and film reviews to one that attracts readers and contributors worldwide--from the Academy, the arts, and from Jungian analyst-scholars. Featuring peer-reviewed scholarly articles, poetry, art, book and film reviews, and obituaries, Jung Journal offers a dialogue between culture--as reflected in art.
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