At least three major questions can be asked of myth: what is its subject
matter? what is its origin? and what is its function? Theories of myth
may differ on the answers they give to any of these questions, but more
basically they may also differ on which of the questions they ask. C. G.
Jung's theory is one of the few that purports to answer fully all three
questions. This volume collects and organizes the key passages on myth
by Jung himself and by some of the most prominent Jungian writers after
him: Erich Neumann, Marie-Louise von Franz, and James Hillman. The book
synthesizes the discovery of myth as a way of thinking, where it becomes
a therapeutic tool providing an entrance to the unconscious.In the first
selections, Jung begins to differentiate his theory from Freud's by
asserting that there are fantasies and dreams of an "impersonal" nature
that cannot be reduced to experiences in a person's past. Jung then
asserts that the similarities among myths are the result of the
projection of the collective rather than the personal unconscious onto
the external world. Finally, he comes to the conclusion that myth
originates and functions to satisfy the psychological need for contact
with the unconscious--not merely to announce the existence of the
unconscious, but to let us experience it.