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The Celtic Revival began more than a century before Yeats and the
Irish Literary Renaissance. Keats and Romantic Celtism is the first
book to consider the pervasive influence of period Celticism upon
Keats's work, from the Druidism that underlies his unfinished epics
to the Celtic-derived folklore that his poetry draws upon.
Christine Gallant shows that more than two hundred and fifty
traditional folklore motifs of the faerie fill his major poems, as
well as minor epistolary ones that have been critically neglected.
Ever since Jung's break with Freud, he has been excluded from both
the psychoanalytic discourse and those schools of literary
criticism influenced by psychoanalysis. But this very exclusion has
shaped the discourse. Further, many of the analytic writings of
Jung and the post-Jungian school of Developmental Jungians are
parallel to work by contemporary ego psychologists and feminists,
and could contribute to those fields. Jung's entire case throws
much light upon the state of marginalization, its effects and its
powers.
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