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THE MASCULINE QUEST FOR THE WHITENESS
The telestic nature of the Masculine Mysteries
served as the medium for The Whiteness which, in its generality, points directly
to a representation of Death and the
masculine
drive to achieve union of the Self
at the
last stop in life: the divine after-life
unity otherwise known as God or Allah,
or,
as Jung psychologically paraphrased
it, the
Unus Mundus . For Freud this unity was called Eros, as
simply “life drive,” in his distinction
between
Eros and Thanatos. For Jung it included the Unus Mundus as final and everlasting Oneness. For Goethe
it was perhaps a return to the All and which, of course, is no-place at all,
i.e., u-topos. For Herman Melville it was expressed through
his Capt. Ahab who was joined in final
unity
with the great white whale. Today we
may
recognize as much in the suicidal martyr.
In all cases the quest for The Whiteness expressed a haste to prematurely achieve
final perfection. Such drives, for
the most
part were, at least typically, fit for men except for its feminine demeanor exemplified by the animus of the feminine
psychology, a woman's inner and largely
unconscious
"maleness." In all cases,
the color
of all color and exclusively male quest
for
Final Perfection I must treat with
regard
to its form as only inferentially metaphysical and theological. But the content
in fact addressed what Jung referred
to as
the imago dei: God as the psychological rather than the
metaphysical Self. From this less than
theological
standpoint the Deity, as Melville noted
in
his Moby Dick, was concealed beneath
the
veil of Whiteness.
The above polarities I have generalized as
The Whiteness, the heroic masculine thanatic trieb (death instinct) and The Blackness as Eros
and the creative feminine proclivity
for
"life" and endopsychic perception.
In the first part of this work, however,
I start out with a more naive and narrative
approach. I then move on to more complex metapsychological speculations
and not the least of which is my notice
and
notation of word and number synchronicties.
Bernard X. Bovasso Saugerties, Front cover design by the author A
Bernard X. Bovasso is essentially a painter
and a poet and a onetime art and drama
reviewer
for the Woodstock Times of Woodstock,
N.Y.
His interest in the work of C.G. Jung
of
The present work recapitulates much of this
more so that it was accompanied by
a cluster
of synchronicistic experiences that
by no
means diminished his often contentious
relation
to neo-Jungian psychologists and their
theoretical
affectations. In effect, the writting
of
The Masculine Mysteries preceded the recently published (2005) Polyimagical Realm and its critique of “Archetypal Psychology.” |
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