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The Lost Child Complex in Australian Film - Jung, Story and Playing Beneath the Past (Paperback)
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The Lost Child Complex in Australian Film - Jung, Story and Playing Beneath the Past (Paperback)
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The mythologising of lost and abandoned children significantly
influences Australian storytelling. In The Lost Child Complex in
Australian Film, Terrie Waddell looks at the concept of the 'lost
child' from a psychological and cultural perspective. Taking an
interdisciplinary Jungian approach, she re-evaluates this cyclic
storytelling motif in history, literature, and the creative arts,
as the nucleus of a cultural complex - a group obsession that as
Jung argued of all complexes, has us. Waddell explores 'the lost
child' in its many manifestations, as an element of the individual
and collective psyche, historically related to the trauma of
colonisation and war, and as key theme in Australian cinema from
the industry's formative years to the present day. The films
discussed in textual depth transcend literal lost in the bush
mythologies, or actual cases of displaced children, to focus on
vulnerable children rendered lost through government and
institutional practices, and adult/parental characters
developmentally arrested by comforting or traumatic childhood
memories. The victory/winning fixation governing the USA -
diametrically opposed to the lost child motif - is also discussed
as a comparative example of the mesmerising nature of the cultural
complex. Examining iconic characters and events, such as the
Gallipoli Campaign and Trump's presidency, and films such as The
Babadook, Lion, and Predestination, this book scrutinises the way
in which a culture talks to itself, about itself. This analysis
looks beyond the melancholy traditionally ascribed to the lost
child, by arguing that the repetitive and prolific imagery that
this theme stimulates, can be positive and inspiring. The Lost
Child Complex in Australian Film is a unique and compelling work
which will be highly relevant for academics and students of Jungian
and post-Jungian ideas, cultural studies, screen and media studies.
It will also appeal to Jungian psychotherapists and analytical
psychologists as well as readers with a broader interest in
Australian history and politics.
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