Jeannette Mageo is Professor of cultural anthropology at Washington State University. Her work focuses on dreaming and the self, on child development, and on how subjectivity, identity, and emotion evolve out of cultural and historical experiences. Her manifold writings on dreams show that cultural models tie the most profound aspects of subjectivity to politics and public culture, inscribing relations of privileging and marginalization within the self that generate anxiety and resistances registered and negotiated in the imaginary realm.
¿Part I A Mimetic Theory of Dreams
1 Mimesis and Dreaming: An Introduction
2 Mimetic Strategies of Signification in Dreams
3 Mimesis in the Theater of Dreams
4 Mimesis Makes for Ambiguity
Part II Competing/Complementary Theories
5 Mimesis Makes Metaphors6 Nightmares, or Threat Simulation as Mimetic Commentary
7 Beyond Continuity and Social Simulation
Part III Mimesis and American Selves
8 The Close Family and American Cultural Psychodynamics
9 Mirror-Phase Cultural Psychology and American Specular Selves
10 Dreams, Mimesis, and Consciousness