Twice-told tales : the psychological use of fairy tales

by Hans Dieckmann

Book, 1986

Status

Available

Call number

APJA

Call number

APJA

Publication

Wilmette, Ill. : Chiron Publications, c1986.

Physical description

xiv, 139 p.; 23 cm

Local notes

Twice-Told Tales are not only for the young. Many have discovered the “magnificent, colorful, many-sided, fantasy world of fairy tales” as children, but, as Hans Dieckmann points out, we can rediscover their value as adults.

“As with all great art, the fairy tale’s deepest meaning will be different for each person, and different for the same person at various moments in his life.” (Bruno Bettelheim, The Uses of Enchantment)

By the use of case histories, Dr. Dieckmann recounts ways in which “the greatest treasures of the soul” can be revealed in fairy tales. He graphically shows how fairy tales can give “color and vivacity to a life grown empty, sterile, and desolate.” Dr. Dieckmann interprets the symbolic significance of many individual fairy tales and relates their meaning to various stages of a person’s development.

Hans Deickmann, M.D., is currently president of the International Associations for Analytical Psychology He Lives and practices as a Jungian Analyst in Berlin, West Germany. He is author of many articles and books, among them the standard textbook, Methoden der analytischen Psychologie (Methods of Analytical Psychology.

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