Wednesday, November 9, 2016 Pacifica invites you to the oral defense of Kathryn Gale Chappelle's dissertation in Clinical Psychology entitled, "Undeath and the Maiden: Vampire-Human Romance in Contemporary Film and Television"
Traditionally portrayed as personifications of an ancient archetype representative of evil, death, and darkness, male vampires have only recently become popular as romantic heroes who fall in love with the female human protagonists of their stories. This hermeneutic study employs archetypal analysis to address its central research question: in heroic vampire texts, what is the psychological significance of the love relationships between undead male vampire heroes and living female human hero/ines? At issue is why this image of male-female syzygy constellated during a particular era (1992-2014), and how it both reinforces and challenges cultural attitudes regarding love, masculinity, and femininity. Four popular texts are viewed through the lenses of classical and post-Jungian theory, archetypal symbolism, mythological and literary parallels, and cultural contexts. Considered synchronically and diachronically, the mytheme of male vampire-female human syzygy is found to reflect and inform male and female psychology; specifically, the interpsychic relationship between gendered ego and contrasexual Other (anima or animus), the intrapsychic relationship between romantic partners that can lead to either psychological growth or regression, and the individuation of a culture transitioning from patriarchal to post-patriarchal society still working through the complexities of changing gender identities, roles, and relationships.
Keywords: vampires, heroes, Jungian psychology, individuation, romantic love, anima, animus, masculinity, femininity, cultural shadow
EXTERNAL READER: Dr. Luke Hockley
All Oral Defense attendees must shuttle from the Best Western Hotel in Carpinteria
Because of Pacifica’s conditional use permit, which restricts campus parking, all guests of Pacifica must use our complimentary shuttle to campus. Please call 896-1887 or 896-1888 for a shuttle pickup from the Best Western. A driver will pick you shortly and deliver you to the campus.
*Thank you for your kind consideration of our campus*
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