ABSTRACT

Drawing on Jungian psychology to show why Egypt has been so important in the history of Western civilisation, Michael Rice explains the majesty and enduring appeal of Egyptian civilization.

Jung claimed that there exist certain psychological drives dormant in our shared unconscious: these are the archetypes. From the omnipotent god to the idea of the nation state, the formulation of most of these archetypes is owed to ancient Egypt.

Michael Rice sets out to recover the sense of wonder that the Egyptians themselves felt as they contemplated the world in which they lived, and the way they expressed that wonder in the religion, art and literature. He traces the story of Egyptian civilization from its emergence in the third millennium BC to its transformation following the Macedonian conquest in 30 BC.

chapter I|27 pages

THE NATURE OF ANCIENT EGYPT

chapter II|26 pages

THE ANCIENT EGYPTIAN PSYCHE

chapter III|13 pages

EGYPT AND ‘THE GODS’

chapter IV|23 pages

BEFORE THE KINGS: PREDYNASTIC EGYPT

chapter V|16 pages

KINGSHIP AND THE ARCHAIC KINGS

chapter VI|17 pages

EGYPT’S GLORY: THE OLD KINGDOM

chapter VII|5 pages

HIATUS: THE FIRST INTERMEDIATE PERIOD

chapter VIII|16 pages

RESTORATION: THE MIDDLE KINGDOM

chapter IX|5 pages

INVASION: THE SECOND INTERMEDIATE PERIOD

chapter X|14 pages

IMPERIAL EGYPT: THE NEW KINGDOM

chapter XI|8 pages

Tutankhamun and the Reaffirmation of Amun

chapter XII|7 pages

THE RAMESSIDES AND THE DECLINE OF EGYPT

chapter XIII|9 pages

THE FINAL PHASE

chapter XIV|11 pages

THE GREEKS IN EGYPT

chapter XV|16 pages

THE MYTH OF EGYPT