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The Archetype of the Shadow - Printable Version

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The Archetype of the Shadow - David Guyatt - 07-10-2009

Overflowing with subtle (and not so subtle) occult and esoteric symbols, Albrecht Durer's "Melencolia I" is said by many to be the first of 4 (the four temperaments).

However, I wonder if the numeral 1 isn't actually a capital "I" meaning that Durer had undergone the Alchemical Nigredo - often referred to as "Melancholia"?

[Image: durer23.jpg]

Of which more HERE (not exactly my preferred choice of title in these dark days but viewed from the brighter side of things it is meaningful.


The Archetype of the Shadow - Keith Millea - 08-10-2009

"Alchemical Nigredo"

I had to search for what that meant.I didn't expect to go down the "rabbit hole".Finally crawling back out after several hours of traveling through the Land of Esoterica.This quote by Terence McKenna stands out to me.

http://www.well.com/user/davidu/tmalchemy.html

Quote:Well, so then, this is a phenomenon in the physical world and then mind is a phenomenon in the Cartesian distinction, which is between the Res Extensa and the Res Verins. This is the great splitting of the world into two parts. I remember Al Wong once said to me, we were talking about the yin yang symbol, and he said you know the interesting thing is not the yin or the yang, the interesting thing is the s shaped surface that runs between them. And that s shaped surface is a river of alchemical mercury. Now, where the alchemists saw this river of alchemical mercury is in the boundary between waking and sleeping. There is a place, not quite sleeping, not quite waking, and there there flows this river of alchemical mercury where you can project the contents of the unconscious and you can read it back to yourself. This kind of thinking is confounding to scientific thought where the effort is always to fix everything to a given identity and a given set of behaviors.

It is this boundary BETWEEN waking and sleeping,that is the place of my dreams.I stay away from this place.My dreams,although rare, are violent.I am projecting the contents of my unconscious there.I know of where these projections come from.Obviously,from my expierence with WAR.

If I'm reading correctly,Jungian theory of the Shadow reflects that I should embrace this Nigredo.Not being a psychotic,at least so far,I find it much better to just leave the beast alone.I do accept though violence as being a part of the natural world,just as a wolf will devour a young deer.Could it be that by ACCEPTING violence as a natural phenomenon in this world,that in fact I am EMBRACING the shadow also?Any thoughts?:hmmmm:


The Archetype of the Shadow - David Guyatt - 09-10-2009

Keith, a very well considered and poignant question.

Sadly, I cannot speak for anyone but myself. I consider the Shadow confrontation to be vital.

Jung very much considered that the Unconscious was where the healing process lay. To activate it, one had to descend into the dark realms of the Nigredo, often symbolized by the Crow. See for example, the title page image to Fulcanelli HERE - where the Sphinx, a hybrid of man and beast - is a symbol of the Alchemical process.

And recording one's dreams was (and remains) a vital discipline in the Jungian healing process. Hence the old Alchemical term "Dormiens Vigila" (Whilst sleeping, watch!).

But it is NOT a journey to be undertaken without great care. Normally one would need the help and assistance of a qualified Analyst and/or a teacher who has trod the spiral staircase before you. Experience (rather than theory) is the only meaningful qualification, I think.

And finally, I entirely agree with the extract you posted about the S shape between the Yin and Yang symbol. That is the magical place.

In my life I have been most fortunate to have had three fabulous teachers, one of whom was an outstanding Tai Chi master, another a remarkable "old school" Jungian Analyst (not all of them are btw) and the third, well, actually that was two, not one, and is another story for another time.

Significantly, three of these four were of the gentler sex.


The Archetype of the Shadow - David Guyatt - 28-10-2009

In Egyptian mythology, Nehebkau ("he who harnesses the souls") was the two headed serpent deity who guarded the entrance to the underworld and who fed "Milk of Light" - a magical liquid - to the deceased to heal them had they been bitten by a poison creature. He was one of the 40 Gods in the Halls of Maat who helped judge the deceased.

How curious then, that a two-headed snake has been found in, of all places, a drawer full of rubbish in the USA. It may be worth mentioning the rubbish-in-a-draw angle because tit could easily equate with the mire of the underworld and therefore be a quite fitting location in which to find a two-headed snake.

In the below article, the Greek Hydra is incorrectly allocated, as the Hydra normally had nine heads - but if one was cut off, two grew back in its place. The Hydra was a water snake.

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/5/20091028/tod-two-headed-snake-found-in-drawer-of-870a197.html

Quote:Two-Headed Snake Found In Drawer Of Rubbish
Wednesday, October 28 09:28 am
© Sky News 2009

[Image: two-headedsnake.jpg]

A two-headed snake has been discovered in a drawer full of rubbish in Illinois. Skip related content

When Jerry Williamson's wife first told him she had found the scary reptile he thought she was pulling his leg.

But to his surprise she was telling the truth.

Unfazed by the terrifying stigma attached to the two-headed Hydra of Greek mythology the couple decided to keep the reptile.

They were worried it would not be able to survive on its own.

They say it is a North American water snake and has just shed its skin.

The 'Nerodia sipedon', as it is also known, is a large non-venemous snake active during day and night.

http://www.cgjungny.org/d/d_mythpsyche.html

Jung on the descent to the Underworld (Hades):

Quote:The Hero Myth: The Dragon Fight and Redemption of the Feminine
In the fight with the dragon the hero battles the regressive forces of the unconscious which threaten to swallow the individuating ego. The forces, personified in figures like Circe, Kali, medusa, sea serpents, Minotaur, or Gorgon, represent the Terrible side of the Great Mother. The Hero may voluntarily submit to being swallowed by the monster, or to a conscious descent into Hades so as to vanquish the forces of darkness. This mortifying descent into the abyss, the sea, the dark cave, or the underworld in order to be reborn to a new identity expresses the symbolism of the night-sea journey through the uterine belly of the monster. It is a fundamental theme in mythology the world over – that of death and rebirth. All initiatory rituals involve this basic archetypal pattern through which the old order and early infantile attachments must die and a more mature and productive life be born in their place.

The mythological goal of the dragon fight is almost always the virgin, the captive, or more generally, the “treasure hard to attain.” This image of the vulnerable, beautiful, and enchanting woman, guarded by and captive of a menacing monster gives us a picture of the inner core of the personality and its surrounding defenses. The hero’s task is to rescue the maiden from the grasp of the monster and, ultimately, to marry her and establish his kingdom with her. This dragon fight and liberation of the captive is the archetypal pattern that can guide us through those major transitional passages in our personal development where a rebirth or reorientation of consciousness is indicated. The captive represents the “new” element whose liberation makes all further development possible.

In response to the call the hero undertakes a journey, usually a dangerous journey to an unknown region full of both promise and danger. Often the journey is a descent. Sometimes, as with Jonah, Aeneas, Christ, and Psyche, it is a descent into the depths — the sea, the underworld, or Hades itself. Always there is a perilous crossing. Sometimes the faintheartedness of the hero is balanced by the appearance of guardians or helpful animals that enable the hero to perform the superhuman task that cannot be accomplished unaided. These helpful forces are representatives of the psychic totality that supports the ego in its struggle. They bear witness to the fact that the essential function of the hero myth is the development of the individual’s true personality.

My bolding


The Archetype of the Shadow - David Guyatt - 11-11-2009

Continuing the Shadow Archetype theme, the following slim .pdf file is highly recommended:


The Archetype of the Shadow - David Guyatt - 02-12-2009

The importance of withdrawing projections cannot be understated. In the following transcript form an interview by Jung's successor, Marie-Louise von Franz says it all.

http://touchingtheshadow.blogspot.com/2008/01/marie-louise-von-franz-on-touching.html

Quote:"If not more people try to reflect and take back their projections, and take the opposite within themselves, there will be a total destruction. There are a lot of people who go through life and the unconscious is not a reality to them. They say at breakfast I had a funny dream, and in the afternoon they know nothing about it. But if we paint them and interpret them and think about them, the dream becomes real. And that's why you need to be lonely so the unconscious becomes stronger. It's like loading up the unconscious and than it manifests. Hermes Trismegistus said in one active imagination to an alchemist: "I am the friend to whoever is lonely". We have now preceding the man who pours water into the fish. Now the fish is the unconcious; so we have to support the unconscious. It's not enough to just have it. We have to actively turn toward it and support it, so that it then helps us. Jung once said: "The toads and the frogs are god's first attempt to make man on a cold-blooded level. And then he didn't quite succeed, so he kept the idea in mind." There are many people are not in analysis but they are naturally gifted, which I would call: they are honest. And they find these things without analysis. I have lived in this tower for 8 weeks alone without speaking one word to anybody. And I sometimes thought I was going off my head. But the unconscious became alive. It was my path. Jung: "There are no other similar beings like man. That thus are articulate and conscious; can give account for their functioning".

Click on the above link to watch the interview.


The Archetype of the Shadow - David Guyatt - 18-12-2009

Do I dream the dream that I alive or does the dream dream me into existence?

Memories, Dreams, Reflections


The Archetype of the Shadow - Magda Hassan - 19-12-2009

Ah! Thank you so much David. I have lost my copy of MD&R and I love that book.


The Archetype of the Shadow - David Guyatt - 01-02-2010

Shadow and Evil in Fairy Tales, Marie-Louise von Franz.

I'm unable to find a digital free copy of this book which I highly recommend. The following is the blurb from the MLvF website"

http://marie-louisevonfranz.com/b/se1/

Quote:Fairy tales seem to be innocent stories, yet they contain profound lessons for those who would dive deep into their waters of meaning. In this book, Marie-Louise von Franz uncovers some of the important lessons concealed in tales from around the world, drawing on the wealth of her knowledge of folklore, her experience as a psychoanalyst and a collaborator with Jung, and her great personal wisdom. Among the many topics discussed in relation to the dark side of life and human psychology, both individual and collective, are:
•How different aspects of the "shadow" - all the affects and attitudes that are unconscious to the ego personality - are personified in the giants and monsters, ghosts, and demons, evil kings and wicked witches of fairy tales
•How problems of the shadow manifest differently in men and women
•What fairy tales say about the kinds of behavior and attitudes that invite evil
•How Jung's technique of Active imagination can be used to overcome overwhelming negative emotions
•How ghost stories and superstitions reflect the psychology of grieving
•What fairy tales advise us about whether to struggle against evil or turn the other cheek

Dr. von Franz concludes that every rule of behavior that we can learn from the unconscious through fairy tales and dreams is usually a paradox: sometimes there must be a physical struggle against evil and sometimes a contest of wits, sometimes a display of strength or magic and sometimes a retreat. Above all, she shows the importance of relying on the central, authentic core of our being - the innermost Self, which is beyond the struggle between the opposites of good and evil.



The Archetype of the Shadow - David Guyatt - 01-02-2010

Confronting the Villain in Harry Potter and The Sorcerer’s Stone
:

http://www.thejungiansociety.org/Jung%20Society/Conferences/Conference-2003/Harry-Potter.html

Quote:Confronting the Villain in Harry Potter and The Sorcerer’s Stone:
Voldemort as Shadow and Evil Magician

Glenna Andrade

Beloved by readers of all ages for the past several years, the Harry Potter series depicts a young schoolboy’s development as a fledgling wizard in his fairytale boarding school of Hogwarts in England. Throughout the novels, Harry’s knowledge and skill in magic increases while his nemesis Voldemort becomes more powerful. Each novel climaxes in Harry’s confrontation with either Voldemort or his agents. Using the first novel Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, we examine the role of Voldemort as a projection of Harry’s shadow, perceiving his contacts with the animus, the anima, and with the parental imago of the “wise old man” of the fairytale--all connections providing Harry with moral lessons as he grows towards individuation.

Because the Voldemort’s name can be transliterated as either “flight from death” or “wish for death,” his very name indicates his function as Harry’s shadow. By definition, the shadow is the “personification of certain aspects of the unconscious personality…which…is the dark, unlived, and repressed side of the ego complex” (von Franz 5). During the first stage, the shadow represents all the things that person “cannot directly know” (von Franz 5). However, just as Jung indicates, becoming conscious of one’s shadow is essential to self-knowledge (“The Shadow” 9), and so Harry must confront his resistances to self-knowledge that he binds up in this projection (“The Shadow” 9). As a part of Harry’s shadow, the villain images are recessed deeper into his unconscious in the forms of the animus and anima. In Harry’s case, Voldemort represents his animus because he is the same sex as Harry. Delving into the unconscious also allows Harry to connect with his opposite side or anima, his feelings in contrast to his intellect.

On his road to maturation, Harry also faces the dual opposites of the “wise old

man” image of the fairytale realm in the persons of Voldemort and Dumbledore. As Jung explains in “The Spirit in Fairytales,” the positive, “wise old man” image always appears when “the hero is in a hopeless and desperate situation” (217). Just like the positive “wise old man,” Dumbledore gives advice, asks questions to induce self-reflection, gives a talisman (Jung 217-220), and even comes to Harry’s rescue. Alternately, the “wise old man” image appears as an “evil doer” (Jung, The Spirit in Fairytales,” 229-234) or the “old magician” who corresponds to “the negative parental imago in the magic world of the unconscious” (Jung, Fairytales 234). Hence, Voldemort serves as not only Harry’s shadowy animus, but also his negative-father imago as the “old magician” who is counterbalanced by his positive-father imago of Dumbledore.

In particular, Harry Potter’s projection of Voldemort as his evil potential can be further explained by several of Marie Louise von France’s observations on the fairy tale. Written for children primarily, The Sorcerer’s Stone not only follows the pattern of the neo-Jungian, Joseph Campbell’s Monomyth hero, but also casts Harry as the Cinderella figure of the abused stepchild. Harry’s story begins when he lives beneath his foster parents’ stairwell and is then spirited away from his ordinary human or “muggles” life by a fairy “godmother” for a new life in wizard school under Dumbledore’s protection. In addition, because of their simplicity, the fairy tale images allow a clearer look into Harry’s confrontation with his shadow. As Marie von France suggests in Shadow and Evil in Fairytales, since fairy tales reduce to their most elemental aspects, they mirror the “most basic psychological structures of man to a greater extent than [even] myths and literary products” (12). Moreover, the fairy tale elements help explain the Potter series’ adult popularity since such tales, as von Franz says, are reduced to “basic structural elements” that appeal “to everybody” (12).

My plan here is to examine the first appearance of the villain Voldemort during the climax of The Sorcerer’s Stone. A close reading reveals that the images and symbols contribute to the villain’s manifestation as both shadow and evil “magician.”

Voldemort’s very description betrays the evil within the shadow. Near the end of Harry’s quest to rescue the magical Sorcerer’s Stone, Harry descends through a trap door into the metaphoric “underworld” or the unconscious. Here, Harry confronts Voldemort for the first time. When Voldemort’s servant Quirrell unwraps his turban and turns around, Voldemort is exposed. Harry is shocked to find that “Where there should have been a back to Quirrell’s head, there was a…most terrible face” (SS 293). Voldemort’s first manifestation indicates that while Harry is clearly outmatched in wizardry and age, he meets the “face” of evil courageously, willing to confront the dark side of himself, his own shadow, the part of himself he does not yet understand. Furthermore, the appearance of Voldemort as two-faced forecasts Voldemort’s capacity for lying. Additionally, Voldemort’s appearance as a parasite on his servant’s head indicates his power of demonic possession and his evil aptitude to exploit others. In this way, Voldemort’s description as a two-faced parasite begins to symbolize not only Harry’s willingness to face his shadow, but also his moral obligation to respect others and to use power to help, not degrade them.

In the same scene, Voldemort’s appearance as a skull and a snake are important symbols that offer Harry new insights. When he assesses villain’s face, Harry describes it as “Chalk white with glaring red eyes and slits for nostrils, like a snake” (SS 293). On one hand, the “chalk white” face suggests a skull that represents Harry’s fear of death in his collective unconscious. The skull also ties in to Voldemort’s name as meaning “flight from death” or “wish for death.” Obviously, Harry fears his own death from Voldemort who has already killed Harry’s parents (SS 294) and who threatens him, yet the skull also represents Harry’s shadow aspect in his unconscious “wish for death” since this is the only way he can satisfy his intense longing to be re-united with his parents, a weakness that Voldemort often preys upon. On the other hand, the skull also connects to the villain’s ultimate desire as a “flight from death” since his immediate goal is to attain immortality by stealing the Stone. Moreover, Voldemort’s obsession with immortality signifies his evil side since, as von Franz says, “evil entails being swept away by one-sidedness, by only one single pattern of behavior” (von Franz 147). Altogether then, Voldemort’s multivalent death imagery presents Harry with the understanding that obsession becomes evil because a person chooses to ignore balance in life. As Harry learns later from his positive father figure, the headmaster Dumbledore, a gift “like unlimited…life” is a bad choice because death is not to be feared, but rather to be expected as only the “next great adventure” (297). It appears that Dumbledore, like Jung, recognizes death as “a goal and a fulfillment” of life’s natural progression (“The Soul and Death” 495).

Voldemort’s description as a snake reinforces his evil nature in other ways. Clearly, the snake imagery underscores the immortality theme since the snake as a circle served as such before Judeo-Christian myth. Just as important, the snake imagery connects to the biblical Eden as a symbol of flattery and deceit. Like the biblical Satan, Voldemort uses flattery when he tries to convince Harry to give up the Sorcerer’s Stone by acknowledging that he had admired Harry’s parents’ bravery. When flattery does not work, Voldemort descends to deceit when he insists that Harry’s parents need not have died in vain. Fortunately, however, Harry is not deceived: he already realizes that his parents’ deaths were a sacrifice of love in trying to protect him from Voldemort.

The theme of lying has larger moral aspect that connects to Harry’s maturation. Harry has already lied to Quirrell about how to find the Sorcerer’s Stone when Harry saw his reflection in the Mirror of Erised (Desire). Not too incidentally, Harry is much like Perseus who required the “mirror” of objectivity to bypass the emotional shock of looking at Medusa directly (von Franz 249) or into his own evil side. Nonetheless, Harry’s lying reveals a more sophisticated decision. For “moral” not only includes the capacity of discriminating between right and wrong, but also of making an intellectual choice based upon the higher good, as verified by the probability that Voldemort would use the Stone to acquire a separate physical body and attain eternal life-- to advance his control of the world.

In addition to the death and lying symbolism, snake imagery contributes to Voldemort’s position as Harry’s shadow in the fairytale since both can speak with snakes in what wizards call “parseltongue.” Sharing this rare magic power (CS 317), the two are even more similar than indicated by the several suggestions of their physical resemblance (CS 317). Since the ability to communicate in an animal language is a prime element of the fairy tale, Harry’s capacity suggests that he can probe the Nature side of his personality, his emotional aspect, his anima. In this way, Harry can learn to balance intellect and emotion, which promotes his growth towards individuation. In contrast to the villain who uses parseltongue to command animals to attack (CS 308), Harry generally speaks with snakes to understand and help them (SS 28). Harry’s own connection to the snake imagery may be perceived as a positive aspect. The snake often climbs and then descends from the “tree of life” bringing messages to the physical or conscious realm.

Next, in his confrontation scene with Voldemort, Harry glimpses the deeper side of himself through a descent into the numinous realm. When grappling with Quirrell, Harry feels pain in his head and lacks external sight (SS 295). Just like Perseus avoided Medusa’s stare, Harry’s blindness suggests his reluctance to face his shadow because such a look can end in death. As Jung observes, a person may recognize “the relative evil of his nature,” but to gaze into the face of absolute evil is a “rare and shattering experience” (“Shadow” 10). Additionally, Harry’s blindness indicates his respect for a greater spiritual power, for in a fairytale, one should not penetrate the awe of a higher power unless forced to (von Franz 165). Fortunately, Harry’s temporary blindness is compensated with “in-sight.” He descends through an inner hell to attain a numinous experience (von Franz 198). Over Quirrell’s shrieks and Voldemort’s commands to kill him, Harry hears the call of “Harry! Harry!” (SS 295). For his courage to participate in a numinous experience, Harry gains the reward of hearing his parents as helpmates. As we will learn in later novels, his parents will reappear when Harry needs aid in confronting evil, and, in fact, Harry’s father later materializes as the “Petronus” (his patron, his “pater”) in his appearance as the animal helper of the white stag.

Equally important, Harry’s confrontation with Voldemort brings about a connection with his anima or with his emotional side that values love. For example, because Harry is under the power of his dead mother’s love, Harry’s very physical touch of Quirrell brings about his intense pain that causes Quirrell to release his grasp and to retreat (SS 299). Harry’s mother’s gift of love repels Quirrell because he has shared his soul with the evil Voldemort (SS 299). As Dumbledore later explains to Harry,

If there is one thing Voldemort cannot understand, it is love. He didn’t realize that love as powerful as your mother’s for you leaves its own mark. Not a scar, no visible sign … to have been loved so deeply, even though the person who loved us is gone, will give us some protection forever. It is in your very skin. Quirrell, full of hatred, greed, and ambition, sharing his soul with Voldemort, could not touch you for this reason. It was agony to touch a person marked by something so good. (SS 299)

Hence, Harry is protected by his maternal love because, as von Franz says,

“Warm human contact dissipates…clouds of projection” (154). Therefore, Harry’s human contact not only repels physical evil, but also diminishes the grip of his shadow’s projection. Subsequently, Harry begins to perceive that the warmth of love engendered within his anima is the superior human defense against the cold manifestation of hatred.

Additionally, Voldemort personifies the shadow qualities that Harry must

learn to reject. Voldemort embodies that kind of evil that von Franz determines as the “spirit of ‘no life and no love’” (173). Voldemort even seems to derive pleasure from “destructiveness for its own sake” (von Franz 173) since he kills his hosts without remorse. Furthermore, Harry’s shadow-villain Voldemort continues to repudiate his own emotional side. Before he retreats, Voldemort asserts that there is “no good and evil, there is only power, and those too weak to seek it” (SS 291). Here, Voldemort suggests that any positive emotions such as love and compassion betray a lack of strength. He himself denies his anima and thus is trapped within his obsession for power.

On the other hand, Harry accepts the anima aspects of himself: he respects others,

uses power to help not abuse, and appreciates the love that affirms life. As a result of his generous emotions that counterbalance his intellect, Harry learns about the protectiveness of love and gains the reward of connecting with his spiritual patron-father. In this way, Harry’s ego becomes stronger as he begins his journey towards individuation. Seen another way, Harry’s journey resembles the fairytale aspects aligned with his shadow. His journey begins with conventional Cinderella imagery, replicates the plot of the fairytale hero who descends into the numinous realm, and ends with Harry’s confrontation with the shadow that allows him to connect to the positive emotions that promote individuation. Equally important, Harry succeeds in fending off Voldemort because Harry carries a higher power than mere magic: his character reveals he makes good choices. As von France notes, “Knowledge when linked with a state of higher consciousness, is perhaps the greatest means of fighting evil; dissociated from consciousness, it is just one magical trick against another” (250). Moreover, Harry has love on his side too. As von France further points out, in a contest of magic, the drive of love or Eros will win against the “drive of dominion” (252).

In conclusion, using M.L. von Franz’s concepts from The Shadow and Evil in Fairy Tales which amplify Jung’s “The Spirit of the Fairytale,” this investigation concludes that Harry prevails over evil by his willing descent into an inner hell, facilitated by a numinous combination of his knowledge, state of higher consciousness, and inherent drive towards love or Eros. Because the Voldemort’s name can be transliterated as either “flight from death” or “wish for death,” his very name confirms his function as Harry’s shadow. Furthermore, “Vole-de-mort” suggests “vole” or “mole” of death, the despised, sneaky, dark-roaming rodent who functions as the “magician.”

Ultimately, Harry will continue to confront Voldemort in future novels because Harry has more to learn from his shadow. Even his continuing training in wizardry skills will bring him just to par with Voldemort’s intellect and experience. One final lesson must be for Harry to recognize his own capacity for evil. As von Franz says, evil includes the lack of the “spirit of ‘no life and no love’ which…. is destructiveness for its own sake,” but also the self-recognition that everybody possesses the capacity for evil “to some degree” (173). In future novels, Harry must continue to address his shadow that contains his “the dark, unlived, and repressed side” (von Franz 5} and to balance intellect and emotion of his animus and anima. While he has acquired the boon of a positive father imago in Dumbledore and will later attain the animal-helper Patron of his father, ultimately, Harry’s future journeys into his shadow must include his ability to admit his own weaknesses, to recognize his own capacity for evil, and to use his ego strength for self-discipline. Only further novels will tell whether Harry will continue to prevail over his shadow-villain Voldemort.

Works Cited

Jung, C (arl) G (ustav). ”The Shadow” Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self. Bolligen Series XX. Transl. R.F.C. Hull (Second Edition). NY: Princeton UP, 1978.

----. “The Phenomenology of the Spirit in Fairytales” The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious. Bolligen Series XX. Transl. R.F.C. Hull (Second Edition). NY: Princeton UP, 1978.

Rowling, J.K. Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. US: Arthur A. Levin Books, 1999.

----. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. US: Arthur A. Levine Books, 1997.

Williams, Edwin B., General Editor. The Scribner Bantam English Dictionary. NY: Bantam, 1979.

Von Franz, Marie-Louise. Shadow and Evil in Fairytales. Dallas: Spring Publications, Inc., 1987.

Works Consulted

Rowling, J. K. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. US: Arthur A. Levine Books, 2000.

----. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. US: Arthur A. Levine Books, 2003.

----. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. US: Arthur A. Levine Books, 1999.