Jacinta Frawley, MA, JA, TA

Sydney, Australia

Journal of Sandplay Therapy
Volume 20, Issue 1, 2011

Keywords

Vampire, sandplay, individuation, regression, dream, Sandplay therapy, painting, clinical example, folklore, popular culture, film, libido, anxiety, contemporary anxieties

Abstract

Using a dream, two paintings and two sandtrays from clinical practice the author explores the meaning of the vampire image. The vampire image is also amplified in folklore, literature and modern popular culture. The author discusses C. G. Jung’s writings on libido and individuation and argues that the vampire is the image constellated in the psyche when individuation is on the brink of failure. The vampire appears when the longing for fusion and unconsciousness (regression) threatens to overwhelm the instinct toward individuation and consciousness. The author considers what the popularity of the vampire image in popular culture might suggest about contemporary anxieties.