Showing posts with label Trickster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trickster. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

The Female Trickster: The Mask That Reveals





The Female Trickster: The Mask That Reveals, Post-Jungian and Postmodern Psychological Perspectives on Women in Contemporary Culture

The Female Trickster presents a Post-Jungian postmodern perspective regarding the role of women in contemporary Western society by investigating the re-emergence of female trickster energy in all aspects of popular culture.

Ricki Tannen explores the psychological aspects of what happened when women’s imagination was legally and psychologically enclosed millennia ago and demonstrates how the re-emergence of Trickster energy through the female imagination has the radical potential to effect a transformation of western consciousness.

Examples are drawn from a diverse range of sources, from Jane Austen, and female sleuth narratives, to Madonna and Sex and the City, illustrating how Trickster energy is used not to maintain power and control but to integrate and unite the paradoxical through humour

Review:

“Reading this amazing book puts one at the heart of that rare event – a major, discernible shift in human culture and behaviour.

The Female Trickster is a really new take on women in Western society.” – Andrew Samuels, Professor of Analytical Psychology, University of Essex, UK

“A stunning tour de force, The Female Trickster unites depth psychology, mythology, cultural theory, feminism, and literature in an incisive revelation of the feminine in a postmodern age.

The analysis of the fictional female detective as trickster is a startling and valuable contribution to gender research. Tannen is to be congratulated on a book important for students of the humanities and clinicians alike.” – Dr. Susan Rowland, University of Greenwich, UK

“In this excellent and provocative book, Ricki Tannen displays creativity and a refreshing lack of inhibition in her criticism of traditional mores and exposure of the flaw in our cultures that do not recognise the female trickster…I have recommended this book to my colleagues and my patients.” – Marilyn Newman Metzi, from PsycCRITIQUES Vol 52, December 2007.