Kaleidoscope: The Way of Woman and Other EssaysAt an age when most people would be thinking about retirement, Helen M. Luke embarked on two new careers, helping found the Apple Farm Community, a retreat and study center near Three Rivers, Michigan, and simultaneously making her debut as a writer, drawing on a lifetime of spiritual and psychological counseling. These essays, published over the past three decades, show the breadth of Luke's experiences as a Jungian psychologist, lecturer, and author. The collection is divided into three sections, indicative of three main streams in Luke's own thinking: her distinctive viewpoint as a woman who has lived through and observed every decade of the present century; the importance of Anglo-Catholicism as a touchstone for responsibility and discrimination in her search; her lifelong love of examining the world's great literature as a route towards knowledge. Luke's ideas are often iconoclastic to contemporary attitudes of sexual politics, religious dogma, and literary interpretation: her approach is individual and unique, rigorous and refreshing, as she combines these three paths — the way of woman, the way of discrimination, and the way of story — into a kaleidoscope of the inner journey so necessary to us all. |
Contents
THE WAY OF STORY | 3 |
Contents 284 | 5 |
INTRODUCTION ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS | 7 |
Copyright | |
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accept anima animus Aragorn archetypal attitude aware Bardia beauty become birth blessing blood bring Brunhilde C.G. Jung C.S. Lewis Carbonek Charles Williams child choice Christ consciousness danger dark daughter death Demeter Dindrane discrimination divine dream earth Eleusis emotional Eowyn eros essential evil experience face Faramir feeling feminine give Glome goddess gods Gondor Grail Greater Trumps Guinevere healing heart Heaven Hexagram holy human humility imagination individual inner instinct journey Jung kill kind king lives marriage masculine meaning Moses mother mystery myth nature never numinous opposites Orual outer Persephone Pharaoh possession pride Psyche recognize refuse rejected relationship repressed responsibility Ring sacrifice Saul says secret seek sense of humor shadow Siegfried soul speak spirit story suffering sword symbol T.S. Eliot Taliessin Theoden thing tion transformation true truth uncon unconscious values vision voice whole wisdom woman women words Wotan