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What is Anima

Handbook of Research on Translating Myth and Reality in Women Imagery Across Disciplines
In Jung’s analytical psychology, anima is defined as “the woman within a man” or “the female personification of the unconscious in man”. The anima archetype represents the creative power as well as potential for destruction.
Published in Chapter:
The Legacy of the Terrible Mother Archetype in Post-War British Drama: Ann Jellicoe's The Sport of My Mad Mother
Işıl Şahin Gülter (Fırat University, Turkey)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-6458-5.ch009
Abstract
The theatre provides the playwrights with a public platform through which they open up a more comprehensive framework to reinterpret the concept of the feminine. The chapter, in which translation remains a fundamental instrument that will be utilized to offer new interpretations to old ideas about the feminine, explores how the post-war British woman playwright Ann Jellicoe translates a women-related myth and reinterprets the concept of the feminine in The Sport of My Mad Mother (w.1958, r.1962). In this context, the chapter focuses on the concept of the Terrible Mother archetype which represents the female creative power as well as the potential for destruction in the play within a special reference to Jung's premises on the archetypal nature of the femininity and maternity. Thus, the chapter indicates that Ann Jellicoe, taking on board and challenging the perceived social, ideological, and psychological ideals of femininity, reclaims the legacy of the female strength.
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