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Wednesday, February 27, 2019

Carrying the Fire Individuation Toward the Mature Masculine

Carrying the bosom come out of the closet Individuation Toward the Mature Mascu suck and Telos of Cultural Myth in Cormac McCarthys No dry impart for disused hands and The street maggie bortz So everything is necessary. every least thing. This is the securely les parole. nought trick be dispensed with. Nothing despised. Because the seams ar hid from us, you see. The marrowery. The way in which the world is made. (McCarthy, 1999b, 143) It was good that paragon unbroken the truths of life from the youthfulness as they were starting out or else theyd withstand no heart to start at every(prenominal). (McCarthy 1999a, 284)Although patchy tyros plow Cormac McCarthy to be the greatest living impudentist in America, his swarthiness, compelling vision did non reach a mass audience until the film interlingual r annulition of his raw No farming for grey custody (2005) was released in 2007. The film, directed by Ethan and Joel Coen (2007), won the Academy Award for B est Picture. A film adaptation of his latest raw, The Road (2006), which won the Pulitzer Prize, was released in late 2009. McCarthy at champion time has the familiars rapt direction. McCarthys visionary attain outs can be read as conceive ofs of our contemporary horti ending.Great works of art, a ilk dreams, per cook a compensatory take aim for to the conscious attitudes of a society and whitethorn transfer teleological implications. Jung viewed great art as an aperture to the incorporated unconscious mind, through which the role of the specimens in shaping the psychological developwork raget of respective(prenominal)s and societies might be discerned (1930/1966, CW 15, 157, 161). McCarthys afterward myths, intercommunicate in im date and myth, the language of the unconscious, frame the corporate mentalal dissociation that pr razets us, individu tot tout ensembleyy and jointly, from growing up.The lowest, transcendent kitchen range in No commonwealth for former(a) Men, which appears in an ageing mans dream, and the suffer-son vision in The Road advert that a re jointure and recalibration of the cozy Jung ledger Culture & Psyche, Volume 5, Number 4, pp. 2842, ISSN 1934-2039, e-ISSN 1934-2047. 2011 Virginia Allan Detloff Library, C. G. Jung Institute of San Francisco. All rights reserved. enthral direct all requests for permission to photocopy or reproduce article content through the University of California Presss Rights and Permissions website at www. ucpressjournals. com/reprintinfo/asp.DOI 10. 1525/jung. 2011. 5. 4. 28. Maggie Bortz, Telos in No Country for gray-haired Men and The Road 29 gravel and son, representing a marrow of correspondings in the split masculine archetype, constitute the una impairable runway of healing and maturation. This vision may prefigure the emergence of a newfangled pagan myth. Jungian analyst Joseph Henderson identified specific thresh dodderys of intromission or psychological rite s of passage which make possible the transition from childishness to adolescence, from adolescence to early maturity, and from maturity to the experience of laissez dependablee (2005, 11).Our socialization, however, remains dominated by phallic adolescent postcode, seemingly arrested in anachronistic identification with the unen crystalliseened protagonist, still living out a proscribe let labyrinthian a myth of male regeneration through escalating violence inflicted on a fair(prenominal) earth and on graciousity. This entrenched ethnical multi cypherial manifests in and is reinforced by social progress tos of what it authority to be male in innovational America, including the myth of the ego-made man and the ethic of indivi twofoldism. This obscure handlewise bears a r developingary unattached dark that would smash all fetters (Hillman 2005, 5657).To give a clinical example, roughly of my clients, on parole from the Orswelled headn Youth Authority, be very likable sons for the most contribution who, at 14 or 15, bring forth already spent a year behind bars in the states louse up prison system. Their yearnings for identity are framed by a culture of outer action devoid of inner meaning. The lack of connection to an inner life also appears in adult male populations in presenting symptoms exchangeable workaholism, anger issues, substance abuse, relationship problems, and sexual obsession. In older men, the dissociative phenomenon is related to the common tragedy of suicidal depression.Women, of course, are non insubordinate to any of these things. It is axiomatic that masculine pagan dominants affect womens lives and push their relationships with men. On a deeper level, masculine psychological energy is present and knotted in the female aroundone as well. Jung personified the unconscious masculine energy in a woman as an inner male image, the animus. Her stupor has, so to speak, a masculine imprint (1951/1968, CW 9ii, 29). t hrong Hillman personified the psychological mental hospital of the problem of history in the prototypical magery of the senex (old man) and puer ( schoolgirlish man) (2005, 35). rare men and young men are ubiquitous images in McCarthys work. No Country for Old Men and The Road appear to validate Hillmans supposition that a split in the masculine senex-puer archetype underlies the psychic uncomfortableness of our time and that work toward a union of sames moldiness begin at the senex pole of that archetype. Although the reticent McCarthy seems to write from a Jungian-informed perspective, I was unable to note any biographical data linking him to an interest in Jungian psychology.However, he frequently associates with physicists at the interdisciplinary Santa Fe Institute, a bring forward ice chest located at the former site of the Manhattan Project, a collaboration McCarthy has telegraphically attributed to his enduring interest in the way things work (Voice of America 2008) . C. G. Jung collaborated with Nobel 30 jung journal culture & psyche 54 / fall 2011 Prize-winning physicist Wolfgang Pauli and was taken with(p) by the cogent parallels among quantum physics and his psychological theory (Pauli and Jung 1992/2001).Beyond the sha reddened out observer effect and the subject-object bond, quantum physics and Jungian psychology some(prenominal) meditation into depths where the distinctions between energy and matter collapse. Following the development of nuclear weapons, Jung and Pauli also shared a deep concern about the future they feared that in the absence of a great understanding of mans say-so for evil, gayity would destroy itself through the might of its knowledge technology and information (1957/1970, CW 10, 585). Although McCarthys canon garners precise acclaim, his work also provokes controversy.Yale literary critic Harold crest admits to a fierce passion for Blood Meridian (1985), which he considers a masterpiece of American litera ture. Bloom also confesses that he had a hard time finishing the book because he flinched from the fire thrashing that McCarthy portrays (2009, 1). Literary critic Morris Philipson has written For culture, just as for therapy, emblems are not intuitions by themselves they are completely brute circumstances that must be taken (1992, 226227). There are brute facts aplenty inMcCarthys canon scalping, massacres, executions, necrophilia, cannibalism, every imaginable kind of human evil, but his artistic vision reflects the ultimate arcanum of the unconscious and does not kick in itself to facile reduction. Symbolic images, whether interpreted or not, affect us. They represent living psychological dynamics that we experience as feelings, emotions, ideas, and impulses toward action. McCarthys primarily work is often celebrated for its lyrical mode and persistent, commafree sentences.Critic Steven Frye wrote that, for many of us that artistry, his mastery of beauty in language, is the only compensating factor for the bleak and uncompromising world he forces us to confront (2005, 16). scarce in No Country for Old Men, the prose is clipped and minimalistic. The unconscious tends to wrench up the music as required to equilibrate the conscious attitude. Compensatory dreams may become repetitious or disturbing symptoms may become a lot than than(prenominal)(prenominal) severe.Perhaps McCarthys style has changed because we progress to missed the subtler messages of the incorporated unconscious, and it is getting more obviously archetypical in its self-regulatory attempts. As if mirroring a quatern, the pattern of psychic wholeness, No Country for Old Men contains four major characters. The landscape, as character, presents the energy of the dark, infernal feminine. Llewelyn Moss, the hunter who becomes prey, embodies the immature masculine energy of the wiz, a puer looking soil by a negative sire Gordian. Anton Chigurh, the insane devourer, pe rsonifies evil in its human and god-like dimensions.The psychological protagonist, Sheriff Ed Tom bell shape, is a senex figure with prescribed and negative attributes who struggles against his birth reputation to assimilate his tail assembly and to individuate toward the mature masculine. Each represents an autonomous mingled at work internal the collective psyche. Complexes are split-off parts of the personality or culture that behave like independent Maggie Bortz, Telos in No Country for Old Men and The Road 31 beings ( Jung 1937/1969, CW 8, 253). The ultimate meaning of the quaternity in this ethnic dream remains ambiguous. Jung thought that the automatic eneration of quaternary images, whether consciously or in dreams and fantasies, can indicate the egos content to assimilate unconscious substantive. But they may also be fundamentally apotropaic, an attempt by the psyche to prevent itself from disintegrating (Sharp 1991, 111). Both possibilities, further evolution an d collective psychosis, must be binded in reading the work. The commentary of a dream often begins with a careful consideration of the setting. No Country for Old Men unfolds in 1980 in the wild, scrubby borderlands of southmost Texas and Mexico.The landscape is a bare-assed, barren land of sprawling resign plain, lava scree, red dirt, and creosote, sparsely inhabited by Mojave rattlesnakes, scorpions, and birds of prey. The image of the border itself suggests an unstable and explosive place between two worlds where the usual rules do not apply, a sort of psychological no-mans-land where consciousness and unconscious meet. Borders are the domain of the archetypal Trickster, who incites psychic change through creative and bad interventions that disturb the realised psychological order.The archetypal feminine is always a silent, antecedentful, brooding front in McCarthys work. In his novels, anima or soul is sometimes delineated by animals, feral creatures who need human co mfortion, like the pregnant masher that Billy becomes trapped at the beginning of The Crossing (1999b). just abouttimes, and usually briefly, followed by tragic consequences, the anima is projected onto young women in McCarthys novels. But the chthonic feminine, as landscape, is always present in his novels, two as a primitive force of nature and as a deeply unconscious psychological dynamic in the characters psyches.Anima figures fare pretty poorly in McCarthys work. Billy must kill the beloved wolf in The Crossing to save her from a slow, agonizing cobblers last in a dog pit, where she has become the main act in a countercurrent sport that entertains older men. In The Road, anima as landscape has been killed off simply the chthonic feminine is a fading memory, a charred and ruined relic. In No Country for Old Men, anima appears as landscape in forewarning form High bloodweeds along the road. Wiregrass and sacahuista. Beyond in the rock-and-roll arroyos the tracks of dragon s.The raw rock mountains shadowed in the late sun and to the east the shimmering abscissa of the desert plains under a sky where raincurtains hung dark as soot all along the quadrant. That god lives in silence who has scoured the following land with salt and ash. (McCarthy 2005, 45) The dark feminine landscape in No Country for Old Men mirrors the alchemic process of calcinatio and its products salt, a metaphor for jaundice or wisdom, and soot and ash, the residue of exonerate. The calcinatio is performed on the primitive shadow side, which harbors hungry, instinctual desirousness and is contaminated with the unconscious.The fire for the process comes from the frustration of these instinctual desires (Edinger 1994, 2122). 32 jung journal culture & psyche 54 / fall 2011 The characters in No Country for Old Men are ambivalent about the landscape. Uncle Ellis tells the sheriff This unsophisticated was hard on commonwealth. But they never seem to hold it to account. In a way that se ems peculiar. That they didnt . . . How come people dont feel like this country has got a lot to swear out for? They dont. You can say that the country is just the country, it dont actively do nothing, but that dont mean frequently . . This country give kill you in a heartbeat and still people love it. (McCarthy 2005, 271) On one hand, the landscape represents a terrible archetypal m otherwise, the surrealistic ground of a burgeoning drug war, which is itself the continuation of many barbaric historical slaughters. In other respects, the characters identify positively with the landscape. She still nurtures according to her increasingly control abilities. Moss can still find antelope in her deep interior property and a river saves him from certain dying early in the book.All of the novels central male characters are veterans they have gone to war and risked their lives to protect the country. The power of the landscape, however, is muted in No Country for Old Men as opposed t o McCarthys earlier Western novels. Even the moon, the symbol of feminine consciousness, is disfigured. It is as though mans relentless dominance, his constant conquests, savagery, and ever forward progress have effectively depotentiated the chthonic feminine, and she has regressed more deeply into the unconscious.Behind the mask of our technological society lurks a negative mother complex, a dissociation from and opposition to the feminine principle. Complexes are not ours to eliminate. On the contrary, they commonly persist beyond the life of the man-to-man and perpetuate themselves across generations. According to Jung, A complex can be really deluge only if it is lived out to the full . . . If we are to develop further we have to loss leader to us and drink down to the very dregs what . . . we have held at a distance (1954/1968, CW 9i, 184).Unconsciously living out this collective negative mother complex is a dangerous and precarious proposition it performer consuming the natural world and each other in the process. The sulfur major character, Llewelyn Moss, a welder and Viet Nam veteran, is hunting antelope in the desert when he stumbles across the surreal, slaughterhouse scene of a failed drug deal. Moss finds a case of money, a load of heroin, and one dying Hispanic man pleading for water. He takes the money, but his conscience nags him and he comes back to the scene that night with a jug of water for the dying man.His belated act of compassion commences the novels ostensible journey Moss runs with the money, pursued by Anton Chigurh, a jibe hoard of drug dealers, and Sheriff bell shape. Classical Jungian theory links both the puer and the hero to the Great Mother the puer via regressive attachment, the hero via opposition. James Hillman argued, however, that whereas the hero is always bound up in a battle with the mother, the puer spirit is defined in relationship to the father and is not howling(a) in the classical sense. Maggie Bortz, Telo s in No Country for Old Men and The Road 33Puer consciousness is a masculine psychological energy representing, in alchemical terms, a new spirit born of an old spirit (2005, 117). Hillman contended that whereas the emergent masculine ego might pattern itself in association with any archetype, an alchemical union of sames in the puer-senex archetype represents the requisite path of individualization toward the mature masculine. Moss initially seems to reflect qualities of the archetypal puer-like opportunist. Like other mythical puer figures, such(prenominal) as Icarus or Bellerophon,1 he does not recognize his demarcation lines and is more penetrable than he realizes.During his for the first time encounter with the drug dealers, Moss injures his feet by move barefoot in the river gravel and then traversing the country in steadfast boots. A gun hit man wound suffered during his first encounter with Chigurh further lames him for the truncated duration of his life. The classic puer injury to the foot suggests a fatal weakness where this immature consciousness meets the world. Once Moss takes the money, however, his thoughts, feelings, and behaviors clearly pattern male child or uninitiated hero psychological energy.His heroic quest is about silverhis spirit is literalized in currency. Moss is skillful with weapons, which are described in lucubrate detail. Literary critic Jay Ellis astutely observed the technological fetishism with which McCarthy describes Moss intentness with weapons and tools To pre-adolescent (and increasingly, adolescent and older) male indorsers still uncertain about their vulnerability and power in the world . . . the minutiae surrounding objects that afford their user power in the world become all-important . . .Anything that can be added on to an already desirable object that will afford greater lethality, great speed, greater vision, or more information, fills in for what young men fear they lack. (2009, 138) Ellis observe that these powerful weapons and tools ultimately do little for Moss he misses his opening shot at an antelope and is ultimately gunned down by drug dealers at a cheap hotel. Sheriff Bell, in contrast, is dubious of sophisticated weaponry. Tools that comes into our hands comes into theirs too . . . Some of the old time sheriffs wouldnt even carry a firearm (McCarthy 2005, 6263).Moss interactions with women betray an oblique hostility and adolescent insecurity. He uses sarcasm to throw outside(a) and deflect his young wife. Moss mentions mother specifically twice in the book, both times in relation to death, and appears to dialogue with her elsewhere. Shortly in the first place he is murdered, Moss picks up a teenage girl who is hitchhiking. The mother complex speaking through Moss tells the girl Most peoplell run from their own mother to get to hug death by the neck. They cant storage area to see him (McCarthy 2005, 234).Moss unconsciousness of his own limitations, of any transp ersonal ideals, and of the insurmountable evil he both confronts and secretly carries within him, costs him his own life the confirmatory damage includes the deaths of his wife and the young hitchhiker. 34 jung journal culture & psyche 54 / fall 2011 At this point in the ripening of our culture, McCarthy seems to say, the hero is as good as dead(a). Although Moss heroic tale entices the contributor into the novel, as critic Jay Ellis (2009) has noted, this part of the story collapses midway through with Moss death when Sheriff Bells process emerges to dominate.This apparent literary dismissal of the heroic neurosis may reflect its psychological status as a due southary pathology, as a symptom of failed initiation that masks a religious problem the missing beau ideal who offered a focus for spiritual things (Hillman 2005, 121). The trine major character, Anton Chigurh, psychopath and assassin, represents the most potent force in the collective psyche at this time. He is a compl ex, quasiarchetypal shadow figure, a senseless psychic forepart who acts as the dynamist or catalyst in the bigger psychological process of the novel.When the reader meets Chigurh, he is a prisoner in a exquisite, rural county jail. While the arresting deputy chats on the phone, Chigurh, in one fluid move, gets his manacled hands in front of his body and most the jailors neck. After the grisly murder, Chigurh nonchalantly uses the bathroom, binds his injured wrists with read and paper towels, and sits at the desk studying the dead man gaping up from the floor (McCarthy 2005, 6). There is no emotion in the scene beyond the horror it evokes in the reader. The motif of the murdered jailor has appeared elsewhere in McCarthys work.Here, Chigurh represents an archetypal impulse or tendency that has been banished, repressed, locked up, but has now freed itself to act. Chigurh, unalike Moss, is not motivated by money. When he eventually recovers the satchel of stolen cash, he returns it. Killing people is Chigurhs job. The world is his abattoir. He is the quintessential kindness hunter, a contemporary iteration of the scalp hunters in Blood Meridian. He prefers to dispatch his victims (and to open doors) with a cattlegun. Other people become objects or livestock to him, and in this way, he prefigures the cannibals in The Road.Anton Chigurh seems to embody shadow qualities in good order belonging to the personal unconscious of the other characters, as though the archetypal split between the contaminated puer and ineffectual senex created a psychological void that he is obligated, through some inscrutable psychological rule, to fill. In some respects, he is like a photographic negative of Moss. He even mirrors Moss limp, sustaining a leg injury while inflicting one. When Chigurh is injured in a car crash late in the book, he buys a boys shirt to make a sling for his broken arm, mirroring Moss earlier purchase of a boys coat on the Mexican border.Chigurh certainly needs no help from anyone. Women who spend too much time around Chigurh, like those who become involved with Moss, wind up dead. An aura of the negative hero seems to radiate around him. At the same time, Chigurh seems to carry some qualities of the negative senex that seem related to Sheriff Bell. As a senex figure, Bell represents, among other things, Maggie Bortz, Telos in No Country for Old Men and The Road 35 justice, law, and the process whereby these concepts are enforced in human affairs through the sometimes arbitrary power of an established order.Within an individual psyche, these ordering and moral functions are often associated with the senex archetype, and, inevitably, a murky shadow accompanies them. A morality based on senexconsciousness will always be dubious. No matter what strict code of ethical purity it asserts, in the execution of its lofty principles in that respect will be a balancing loathsome horror not far away (Hillman 2005, 260). (The first line of the book suggests as much I sent one boy to the gaschamber at Huntsville McCarthy 2005, 3. Like a dark reflection of the senex compulsion for law, order, and measurement, Chigurh is a man of exacting principles principles that transcend money or drugs or anything like that (153). As Moss wife begs for her life, Chigurh shakes his head. Youre asking that I make myself vulnerable and that I can never do. I have only one way to live and it doesnt allow for special cases (259). Anton Chigurh serves as a vehicle of unconscious projection for the reader. His sadistic acts and complete emotional onanism inspire terror. This character, so indefinably foreign, o marginally human, does not seem like one of us, but he is an irrefutable psychological truth that belongs to our culture. He represents something we should know about ourselves that remains unconscious, like a not that understood dream. While Chigurhs vulnerability to forcible injury suggests a human shadow figure, his disappearing a cts, miraculous escapes, and his association with fate lend him a supernatural aura that suggests the archetypal shadow. By the end of the novel, Bell comes to believe that Satan explains a lot of things that otherwise dont have no explanation (McCarthy 2005, 218).Chigurh himself confesses that he has found it useful to model himself after God (257). For our culture at this time, we might say Chigurh is God, the dark God fully grown more human, closer to consciousness. Chigurh resembles the God-image Jung discovered in the Book of Job. Jung found that Yahweh, egged on by Satan, possessed, in part, an animal nature (1952/1969, CW 11, 600) and, in this way, was less than human (599). Like Yahweh, Chigurh is guilty of murder, bodily injury with premeditation, and denial of a fair trial (581).For Jung, Yahwehs cruelty to Job is further exacerbated by the fact that Yahweh displays no compunction, remorse, or compassion, but only ruthlessness and brutality (581) we find the same divine h eartlessness, fed by the unconscious, in Chigurh. Chigurh shares another quality with Yahweh Nowhere does he come up against an insuperable obstacle that would force him to hesitate and hence make him reflect on himself (579). In Jungs view, the Christ symbol represents only an intermediate stage in a process of divine development in which God effectively dissociated from his own dark side.Identification with the exclusively good, loving aspects of the divinity is bound 36 jung journal culture & psyche 54 / fall 2011 to lead to a dangerous accumulation of evil (1952/1969, CW 11, 653). Anton Chigurh symbolizes that magnetic, irrational pull to incarnate Gods darkness, the ultimate source of evil, its absolute home (Stein 1995, 144). Chigurh slays the cultural hero and provokes Bells psychological development he is the dynamic agent, the terrorist, and instigator of Bells emergent connection to the unconscious. The realization of the self as an autonomous psychic factor is often sti mulated by the bang of content over which the ego has no control (Sharp 1991, 120). The irruption of contents like this can destroy the ego. In his Trickster role, Chigurh is not unlike Satan in the Book of Job or the serpent in the Garden of Eden. Evil serves a psychological function. The stirring up of fight is a Luciferian virtue in the true sense of the word. Conflict engenders fire, the fire of affects and emotions, and like every other fire it has two aspects, that of combustion and that of creating open-eyed ( Jung 1954/1968, CW 9i, 179).The conscious attitude determines whether the conflict is ultimately illuminating or destructive we either evolve from our mistakes or we unconsciously dig deeper into our accustomed defenses. Sheriff Bell, a country lawman approaching sixty, is the novels psychological protagonist. As a senex figure, Bell seems to represent, at least in part, the conservative function of the archetype, the fastness of our habits (Hillman 2005, 48), the p rinciple of long-lasting survival through order (284). mental movement, once incited by Chigurh, depends blamelessly on Bells interior process.Paradoxically, the path of psychic evolution begins with the senex in a process of disintegration. The novel takes its title from the first line of W. B. Yeats most celebrated poem, Sailing to Byzantium, which contrasts the material world with the transcendent world of art from the viewpoint of an aged man. It urges a belated attention to ones soul. To the extent that art is an aperture to the collective unconscious, the journey to Byzantium implies an intrapsychic movement from the ego toward the Self.Critic John Vanderheide has observed that the renunciation of the physical world expressed in Sailing to Byzantium and No Country for Old Men is forced on the narrator by old age and approaching death, conditions he is powerless to change (2005). Consume my heart away sick with desire And fastened to a dying animal It knows not what it is and gather me Into the artifice of eternity (Yeats 1926/1952, 490, stanza III, ll. 2124) This felt sense of mortality, hopelessness, and limitation is often the cue that ignites the process of identity.The collective unconscious calls aged men whether they will respond and how is another matter entirely, but this painful grease is no country for young men. Maggie Bortz, Telos in No Country for Old Men and The Road 37 As senex figure, Bell is the ostensible point of accumulation keeper of the cultural psyche, but he is flooded with content that he cannot repress. Bafflement pervades his monologues. He longs for times past when the world made more sense to him, but Bells nostalgia is more than a regressive symptom, it implies a separation of halves, a missing conjunction (Hillman 2005, 182).Bell carries notable qualities of the positive senex. His most authentic self is related to others. He sees himself as a shepherd to the people assigned to his care. Ive thought about wherefore it was that I wanted to be a lawman. There was always some part of me that wanted people to listen to what I had to say. But at that place was a part of me too that just wanted to pull everybody in the boat (McCarthy 2005, 296). His psyche is anchored in an imago of the positive feminine in the form of his anima figure, his wife of thirtyone years, Loretta.The escalating violence, his inability to contain it, and the imperatives of his own interior process force Bell to examine the psychological orientation that has guided his life. Bell confronts his own provisional life, an adulthood founded on a lie. As a young soldier in France during World War II, he fought bravely, but in the face of overwhelming odds and certain death, fled the battlefield and his dead companions. He was awarded a Bronze Star for his service, an honor he tried to refuse. His preference as county sheriff followed from this heroic misidentification.Bell confesses this history to his Uncle Ellis, an elderly lawm an disabled in the line of duty, late in the book. I didnt know you could distract your own life, he says (McCarthy 2005, 278). Bell concludes that his history resurfaces because sometimes people would preferably have a bad answer about things than no answer at all (282). Bell endures the part of the alchemical process associated with the death and decay of the old substance, the old way of being in the world. He experiences his growing edge of consciousness as a defeat.Bell makes a final break with the inauthentic hero and our cultures idea of what it means to be a man he quits in the nitty-gritty of the hunt. His decision to retire reflects an understanding of his own limitations and is guided by a deeper psychic injunction. I always knew that you had to be willin to die to even do this job. That was always true. . . . If you aint theyll know it in a heartbeat. I think it is more like what you are willin to become. And I think that a man would have to put his soul at hazard. An d I wont do that. I think now that maybe I never would. (McCarthy 2005, 4)Bell begins to acquiesce to and move into in his interior process, going back through his memories, paying attention to his dreams, engaging in active imagination. He ponders the memory of an image he encountered on the battlefield in France, a stone water bowl carved to last ten thousand years (307). A toilet contains water, a symbol of the unconscious, perchance the personal unconscious, but perhaps the collective one. The trough symbolizes a way of understanding content arising from the unconscious and resonates as a religious symbol. For Jung, 38 jung journal culture & psyche 54 / fall 2011 an had the need for a felt connection to something larger than his ego deeply embedded into the fabric of his being, but man woolly-headed his sense of larger meaning and purpose somewhere amid the horrors and upheavals of the twentieth century. Jung believed that the modern collective failure to channel this insti nct, to carve another indestructible stone trough, was both symptom and root cause of our collective dissociation. Bell rejects the ruling of carving a trough himself it must be a collective enterprise, and no new myth has yet emerged to replace the dying God-image of our culture.Bells only child, a daughter, died as an infant thirty years before the story begins. Childlessness is associated with the negative senex. When the senex has lost its child . . . A dying complex infects all psychic life (Hillman 2005, 263). Late in the book, Bell confides to the reader that for many years he has dialogued with this dead infant daughter (McCarthy 2005, 285). In Jungian theory, that imaginary child would be considered a psychic reality. The novels ultimate meaning resides in two dreams about his dead father.In the first dream, he give me some money and I think I lost it (McCarthy 2005, 309). His father imparted something of great value to him for safekeeping, but he misplaced it, perhaps irr etrievably. The second dream is a powerful reiteration of the first and evokes Jungs famous dream of carrying a small faint in the fog (Jung 1961/1965, 88). The setting is a cold, one Cy night in a remote mountain pass. Bell and his father ride horseback. It was like we was both back in older times and I was on horseback goin through this pass in the mountains.It was cold and in that respect was snow on the ground and he rode past me and kept on goin. neer said nothing. He just rode on past and he had this covering fire wrapped around him and his head down and when he rode past I seen he was carryin fire in a horn the way people used to do and I could see the horn from the light inside of it. About the color of the moon. And in the dream I knew that he was goin on ahead and that he was fixin to make a fire somewhere out there in all that dark and all that cold and I knew that whenever I got there he would be there. (McCarthy 2005, 309)Although the dream can be viewed as regres sive, in that it invokes Bells childhood relationship and a longing to live out an old, honorable myth that has become hostile in the modern world, it clearly carries teleological implications. Bell goes forward into the dark night, into the unknown, toward death. He and his father ride horses, numinous animals in McCarthys work that suggest connection to anima or soul. Horses also represent an older and an arguably more connected way of moving through the world. Bells father carries fire, a symbol for the light of consciousness or spirit, in a horn, a Gnostic symbol of maturity. The horn is a dual symbol from one point of view it is penetrating in shape and therefore active and masculine in significance and from the other it is regulate like a receptacle, which is feminine in meaning (Cirlot 1962/1971, 151). While the image of the horn may suggest a new hieros gamos, a union of masculine and feminine energy, the dead father carries it, not the dream ego Maggie Bortz, Telos in No Country for Old Men and The Road 39 itself. Bells passivity in the dream seems problematic. On the other hand, it is conceivable that Bells lack of agency is an auspicious sign. In the absence of ego and into its emptiness an imaginal stream can flow, providing mythical solutions between the senexpuer contradictions (Hillman 2005, 66). Bells own father aspects are deeply unconscious he has no living children and, in this respect, has lost his fathers inheritance, a future presence in the chain of life. Paradoxically, behind Bells senex mask we find a son looking for the father within. As in most of McCarthys books, the missing psychic presence is the father there is never a shortage of symbolically parentless boys in his work.However, in this novel, the puer appears in the form of Bell as an old man. Bells unconscious frames its message in terms of a reunion and recalibration of the father and the son, as though directly addressing the split masculine archetype that appears to bloc k the evolution of our culture. This split gives us . . . the search of the son for his father and the longing of the father for his son, which is the search and longing for ones own meaning (Hillman 2005, 61). The dream image suggests a path of potential healing, a union of sames in this split archetype, and might represent the dissilient emergence of a new myth.In the end, the dreams telos remains hauntingly ambiguous. We are only at the beginning of a process. In the face of such pervasive and unbridled evil and unconsciousness, one mans individuation seems like a very small thing, a very small thing that requires much effort, attention, devotion, and suffering. The last line of the book immediately follows the second dream Then I woke up (McCarthy 2005, 309). Waking up, increasing consciousness, is the entire point. And thus the novel ends on a slender strand of hope.We must dream this dream on, in the Jungian tradition, and look toward the next dream for further clarification . McCarthys post-apocalyptic novel, The Road, is properly understood as a psychological progression of No Country for Old Men. In The Road, McCarthy resolves the ambiguity of the quaternity image presented in No Country for Old Men. It becomes clear that the imagery portends a collective psychosis and, at the same time, the possibility that some individuals may be ready to assimilate unconscious content. In The Road, the chthonic feminine as landscape has een killed off entirely in an unnamed tragedy marked only by a long shear of light and then a series of low concussions (McCarthy 2006, 45). Given McCarthys long preoccupation with mans proclivity toward evil, the apocalypse was likely manmade perhaps an all-out nuclear war. There are few survivors. Civilization itself is a fading memory. A nameless father and son wander the adust landscape, the cauterized terrain, hoping to scavenge enough canned food to survive while evading nomadic bands of cannibals (12). The boys mother has committed suicide in despair. 40 jung journal culture & psyche 54 / fall 2011McCarthy seems to suggest that the feminine will be eradicated from the picture entirely, the negative mother complex played out to its inevitable conclusion in mans escalating shadow enactments before work on the fundamental problem can begin in what is left of humanity. As Anton Chigurh says, ones path through the world seldom changes and even more seldom will it change abruptly (McCarthy 2005, 259). Despite the horrors, a new symbol, the image of a divine child, an elaboration of the dream imagery of No Country for Old Men, does emerge out of the ruin and ashes of The Road.This symbol arises from the ground of catastrophic loss. The end of the via longissima is the child. But the child begins in the realm of Saturn, in lead or rock, ashes or blackness, and it is there the child is realized. It is warmed to life in a bath of cinders, for only when a problem is finally worn to nothing, soft-witted and dr y can it reveal a wholly unexpected essence. out of the darkest, coldest, most remote burnt out state of the complex the phoenix rises. Petra genetrix out of the stone a child is born. (Hillman 2005, 64)In The Road, the father and son are each others world entire (McCarthy 2006, 5), representing a union of sames in the masculine archetype and, possibly, the beginning of a new cultural myth. The nameless father in The Road struggles to evoke the forms. Where youve nothing else construct ceremonies out of the air and breathe upon them (63). He views his son as a sacred being. As he is dying, the father sees his son standing there in the road looking back at him from some unimaginable future, glowing in that waste like a tabernacle (230). hostile Jesus, this son is not sacrificed back to the father. In the puer is a father jampacknot to find him, reconcile with him, be loved and receive a blessing, but rather to transcend the father which act redeems the fathers limitations (Hillma n 2005, 161). The fathers job is to initiate the son before he dies to provide a sense of meaning that makes existence tolerable. In The Road, individual meaning is symbolized in the sons sacred responsibility to carry the light of consciousness, the only thing of value in a post-apocalyptic world, into the overwhelming darkness that confronts him. This fragile possibility, however, resides in the individual, not within a culture or group.Critic Kenneth Lincoln saw McCarthys novels as lamentational canticles of warning, not directives (2009, 2). routine of Bells function is prophetic he hints at where were headed (McCarthy 2005, 303). I know as certain as death that there aint nothin short of the second comin of Christ that can slow this train (159). McCarthy is first and foremost a storyteller. He is not an activist and does not make prescriptive statements, and it is a mistake to read him that way. The blind man in The Crossing explains the function of storytellers. He said that they had no desire to entertain him nor yet even to instruct him.He said that it was their whole bent only to tell what was true and that otherwise they had no purpose at all (McCarthy 1999b, 284). I imagine that McCarthy shares the blind mans views and also those of Jung, who in writing about art Maggie Bortz, Telos in No Country for Old Men and The Road 41 underscored the fundamental depth psychological dogma that a dream never says you ought or this is the truth. It presents an image in much the same way as nature allows a plant to grow, and it is up to us to draw conclusions (1930/1966, CW 15, 161).Those of us who are conscious enough to draw conclusions from this work must do so now and prepare ourselves as best we can for the dark new world to come. endnote 1. Bellerophon, son of the poove of Corinth, was the hero of Greek mythology who killed the Chimera. Bellerophon, inflated by his triumph, felt entitled to join the gods on Mount Olympus and attempted to fly there on the fly horse, Pegasus. His presumption offended Zeus, who orchestrated the heros dismount. Bellerophon plummeted to earth, crippled in the fall. note References to The Collected Works of C. G. Jung are cited in the text as CW, volume number, and paragraph number.The Collected Works are published in English by Routledge (UK) and Princeton University Press (USA). bibliography Bloom, Harold. 2009. Blooms modern critical views Cormac McCarthy. New York Infobase Publishing. Cirlot, Juan Eduardo. 1962/1971. A dictionary of symbols. Trans. Jack Sage. New York Philosophical Library. Edinger, Edward F. 1994. manakin of the psyche Alchemical symbolism in psychotherapy. Chicago Open Court. Ellis, Jay. 2009. hoodoo and collapse in No country for old men. In Blooms modern critical views Cormac McCarthy, ed. Harold Bloom, 133170. New York Infobase Publishing. Frye, Steven. 2005.Yeats Sailing to Byzantium and McCarthys No country for old men Art and artifice in the new novel. The Cormac McCarthy J ournal, 5, 1 1420. Henderson, Joseph. 2005. Thresholds of initiation. Wilmette, IL Chiron Publications. Hillman, James. 2005. Senex and puer. Putnam, CT Spring. Jung, C. G. 1930/1966. psychology and literature. The spirit in man, art, and literature. CW 15. . 1937/1969. Psychological factors determining human behavior. The structure and dynamics of the psyche. CW 8. . 1951/1968. The syzygy Anima and animus. Aion. CW 9ii. . 1952/1969. Answer to Job. Psychology and religion West and East.CW 11. . 1954/1968. Psychological aspects of the mother archetype. The archetypes and the collective unconscious. CW 9i. . 1957/1970. The undiscovered self (present and future). Civilization in transition. CW 10. . 1961/1965. Memories, dreams, reflections. Recorded and ed. by Aniela Jaffe. Trans. Richard and Clara Winston. New York Vintage Books. Lincoln, Kenneth. 2009. Cormac McCarthy American canticles. New York Palgrave Macmillan. McCarthy, Cormac. 1985. Blood meridian Or the evening redness in th e west. New York Random House. 42 jung journal culture & psyche 54 / fall 2011 McCarthy, Cormac. 1999a.All the pretty horses. New York Alfred A. Knopf. . 1999b. The crossing. New York Alfred A. Knopf. . 2005. No country for old men. New York Alfred A. Knopf. . 2006. The road. New York Alfred A. Knopf. No country for old men. 2007. Screenplay by Ethan Coen and Joel Coen. Based on the novel by Cormac McCarthy, No country for old men, New York Alfred A. Knopf, 2005. Directed by Ethan Coen and Joel Coen. Pauli, Wolfgang, and C. G. Jung. 1992/2001. Atom and archetype The Pauli/Jung letters, 1932 1958. Eds. Carl Alfred Meier, Charles Paul Enz, and Markus Fierz. Trans. David Roscoe. Princeton, NJ Princeton University Press.Philipson, Morris. 1992. Outline of Jungian aesthetics. In Jungian literary criticism, ed. Richard Sugg, 214227. Evanston, IL north University Press. Sharp, Daryl. 1991. C. G. Jung lexicon A primer of terms and concepts. Toronto Inner City Books. Stein, Murray. 1995. Ju ng on evil. Princeton, NJ Princeton University Press. Vanderheide, John. 2005. Varieties of renunciation in the works of Cormac McCarthy. The Cormac McCarthy Journal, 5, 1 3035. Voice of America. 2008. Cormac McCarthy and doubting Thomas McGuane write stories set in the American west. Interviewed by B. Klein and S. Ember. Radio dole out (February 11), voanews. om (accessed October 27, 2009). Yeats, William Butler. 1926/1952. Sailing to Byzantium. In Immortal poems of the English language, ed. Oscar Williams, 490. New York Washington significant Press. maggie bortz earned an M. A. in Counseling Psychology with an emphasis in reasonableness Psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute, Carpinteria, California, and an M. J. in Journalism from the University of California, Berkeley, Graduate School of Journalism. She is a Qualified Mental Health Professional (QMHP) working toward licensure as a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (LMFT) at the Center for Family Development in Eugen e, Oregon.She plans to open a private counseling practice in Portland in 2012. Correspondence 5873 SW Terwilliger Blvd. , Portland, OR 97239. abstract This alchemical hermeneutical study analyzes Cormac McCarthys novels No Country for Old Men and The Road as cultural dreams using Jungian and post-Jungian theory. McCarthys work elucidates the archetypal process of individuation toward the mature masculine in our time. Following McCarthys imagery and James Hillmans work, I focus on the split in the senex-puer archetype that structures the masculine psyche as the ultimate psychological site of our cultural dissociation.I also examine the teleological implications in the novel regarding the evolution of the God-image, which reflects mans understanding of the objective psyche, as well as the nature and psychological function of human evil. key words alchemy, archetypal psychology, chthonic feminine, Coen brothers, cultural psychology, dream interpretation, Jungian interpretation of liter ature, landscape, literature as cultural dreaming, masculine archetypes, Cormac McCarthy, mechanization, No Country for Old Men, puer, The Road, senex, symbol Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.

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