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    The Wounded Woman: Healing the Father-Daughter Relationship

    The Wounded Woman: Healing the Father-Daughter Relationship

    by Linda Schierse Leonard


    eBook

    $19.99
    $19.99

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      ISBN-13: 9780804040020
    • Publisher: Ohio University Press
    • Publication date: 01/01/1982
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 206
    • File size: 298 KB

    In addition to The Wounded Woman,Linda Leonard is the author of several other best-selling books, including Witness to the Fire and Meeting the Madwoman. She has been in private practice as a Jungian analyst for over forty years and is a founding member of the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts. She currently resides in Boulder, Colorado.

    Table of Contents

    CONTENTS Acknowledgements Preface: A Wounded Daughter PART I: THE WOUNDING Chapter 1: The Father-Daughter Wound Chapter 2: Sacrifice of the Daughter Chapter 3: The Eternal Girl Chapter 4: The Armored Amazon Chapter 5: The Man Within PART II: THE HURTING Chapter 6: Rage Chapter 7: Tears PART III: THE HEALING Chapter 8: Feminine Facets Chapter 9: Redeeming the Father Chapter 10: Finding Feminine Spirit Notes

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    This book is an invaluable key to self-understanding. Using examples from her own life and the lives of her clients, as well as from dreams, fairy tales, myths, films, and literature, Linda Schierse Leonard, a Jungian analyst, exposes the wound of the spirit that both men and women of our culture bear—a wound that is grounded in a poor relationship between masculine and feminine principles.

    Leonard speculates that when a father is wounded in his own psychological development, he is not able to give his daughter the care and guidance she needs. Inheriting this wound, she may find that her ability to express herself professionally, intellectually, sexually, and socially is impaired. On a broader scale, Leonard discusses how women compensate for cultural devaluation, resorting to passive submission (“the Eternal Girl”), or a defensive imitation of the masculine (“the Armored Amazon”).

    The Wounded Woman shows that by understanding the father-daughter wound and working to transform it psychologically, it is possible to achieve a fruitful, caring relationship between men and women, between fathers and daughters, a relationship that honors both the mutuality and the uniqueness of the sexes.

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    From the Publisher
    Case histories, dream analyses and Jungian drawings enliven an important, original contribution to the psychology of women.”—Publishers Weekly

    “Ms. Leonard has done something rare in combining her own experience with theory, and it is this combination that makes the book so profoundly moving and alive. Every woman will find insights here and the immense comfort of finding herself. I cannot recommend it too highly, a splendid addition to our growing need to come to terms with womanhood, and to rejoice in it.”—May Sarton

    “The book contains a rich tapestry of stories, classical and contemporary, poems and dramas, myths and fairy tales, and dreams. Leonard has an inexhaustible treasure house of reflective material and dips into it on virtually every page to bring to life the strengths and weaknesses, the wounds and healings of fictional characters and real people…. I believe this book can be an important one for many readers, one that opens the door to healing.”—Psychological Perspectives

    “Drawing on her own experience—and the experiences of her patients—Leonard explores the hurtful influence of a weak father, a tyrannical father, an abusive father. But she is not an angry or embittered woman and The Wounded Woman is not a vindictive book. Rather, it is a healing and loving book, a work of wisdom and insight, a book for both men and women, both fathers and daughters.”—Los Angeles Times

    “(Leonard) draws upon a wealth of illustrative material from her own life experience, her patients, fairy tales, myths, literature, and films. She writes well and integrates theory and practice in a manner that should make her study accessible to an audience of quite diverse backgrounds and interests.”—Library Journal

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