Description

Book Synopsis

This book argues that the fantasy fiction rooted in J. R. R. Tolkien’s concept of Faёrie, as represented by the fantasy works of the Inklings and of U. K. Le Guin, has certain psychotherapeutic properties. Faёrie’s generic ‘ethos’ seems to draw on ‘moral imagination’ and on logos (meaning and word), which informs its secondary worlds and encourages a search for an unconditional sense of life, against the postmodern neo-nihilistic aporia. The book postulates an applicability of logotherapy (‘therapy through meaning’, developed after WW2 by Victor Frankl,) to the workings of Faёrie, whose bibliotherapeutic potential rests on its generic marks, identified by Tolkien as Fantasy, Recovery, Escape (breaking free from incarcerating meaninglessness), Consolation, and (cathartic) Eucatastrophe.



Table of Contents

Fantasy fiction – Faёrie – The Inklings – J. R. R. Tolkien – C. S. Lewis – Owen Barfield – Charles Williams – Ursula K. Le Guin – Mythopoeia – Moral imagination – Neonihilism – Logotherapy – Therapy through meaning – Victor Frankl – Bibliotherapy – Narrative therapy – Catharsis – Eucatastrophe – Therapia pauperum.

Therapy Through Faёrie: Therapeutic Properties of

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    A Hardback by Anna Cholewa-Purgal

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 26/01/2017
      ISBN13: 9783631673812, 978-3631673812
      ISBN10: 3631673817

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book argues that the fantasy fiction rooted in J. R. R. Tolkien’s concept of Faёrie, as represented by the fantasy works of the Inklings and of U. K. Le Guin, has certain psychotherapeutic properties. Faёrie’s generic ‘ethos’ seems to draw on ‘moral imagination’ and on logos (meaning and word), which informs its secondary worlds and encourages a search for an unconditional sense of life, against the postmodern neo-nihilistic aporia. The book postulates an applicability of logotherapy (‘therapy through meaning’, developed after WW2 by Victor Frankl,) to the workings of Faёrie, whose bibliotherapeutic potential rests on its generic marks, identified by Tolkien as Fantasy, Recovery, Escape (breaking free from incarcerating meaninglessness), Consolation, and (cathartic) Eucatastrophe.



      Table of Contents

      Fantasy fiction – Faёrie – The Inklings – J. R. R. Tolkien – C. S. Lewis – Owen Barfield – Charles Williams – Ursula K. Le Guin – Mythopoeia – Moral imagination – Neonihilism – Logotherapy – Therapy through meaning – Victor Frankl – Bibliotherapy – Narrative therapy – Catharsis – Eucatastrophe – Therapia pauperum.

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