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This is an interpretation of Olga Tokarczuk’s novel E.E., published in 1995. The article argues that E.E. to a large extent depends on and plays with the conventions of the modernist psychological novel. It analyzes some of its constitutive elements and reconstructs the psychological and anthropological ideas which shape Tokarczuk’s conceptualizations of personality, the structure of the psyche, anomalies of perception and interpretations of external reality. Two crucial elements of this interpretation are a comparison of Tokarczuk’s text with C.G. Jung’s doctoral dissertation “On the Psychology and Pathology of So-Called Occult Phenomena”, parts of which she made use of in her novel, and her critical examination of the misogynist aspects of psychoanalysis.
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