The Process of Jungian Psychoanalysis in Siddhartha

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Hermann Hesse, a German author famous especially for his novel Siddhartha, among others, was born in 1877 into a Protestant Christian family. Hesse travelled to India in 1911, excited for a spiritual Buddhist experience like his grandfather told him stories about, but was sorely disappointed by scam artists and the country’s poverty. In his later life, Hesse suffered multiple instances of trauma and loss. "During the war, Hesse's life changed drastically as his family began to fall apart. His wife showed symptoms of mental illness, while his third son became very ill. Hesse… experienced, albeit second-hand, the horrors of war. He publicly denounced the war, and in retaliation, the German press labeled him a traitor. As a result, Hesse left Germany and traveled to Lucern, Switzerland to receive Jungian psychoanalysis. He was naturalized in 1922." (World History: The Modern Era). Hesse published his novel Siddhartha in the same year. Siddhartha was clearly influenced by Jungian psychology, as the title character undergoes Jung’s process of psychoanalysis as he examines his life throughout the novel. Hermann Hesse’s Siddhartha explores/dictates/is/describes/whatever a journey/voyage through the works/psychology of psychologist/doctor Carl Jung, as Siddhartha, like Hesse himself, seeks enlightenment on/and the path towards mental health.
At the beginning of the novel, Hesse has Siddhartha question his identity to propel him on the journey towards enlightenment, the first phase of Jungian psychoanalysis. First siddhartha examines his life at home and realizes it is not where he belongs and that he is unhappy. He lives with his Brahmin father, loved and admired by many, but unhappy with himself. Despite having every amenity he could ask...

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...erence, we develop along the lines that are easiest to us, but we also... have a strong tendency to conform to what is expected of us… so that much [which] rightly belongs to the personality is… pushed away into unconsciousness [or] repressed. Small children left to behave naturally... show all the tendencies that the adult is supposed to have grown or been educated out of… [but] the disagreeable or inferior tendencies [in adults] have [only] been pushed into the background and forgotten… often so [successfully] that we come to believe that we are exactly as we appear to be, sometimes with disastrous results. These repressed tendencies belong to what Jung calls the personal unconscious.” (Fordham). Siddhartha has just begun to discover that he has repressed and forgotten his true self, and is ready to venture off towards a healthier new persona and self-awareness.

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