User:Haleyaccountforclass2024/Oresteia/Bibliography


 * Heller, Serena. “Matriarchy, Matricide and Mourning.” British Journal of Psychotherapy, vol. 39, no. 1, Feb. 2023, pp. 50–68. EBSCOhost, https://doi-org.turing.library.northwestern.edu/10.1111/bjp.12790.
 * This source expands on the matricide committed by-proxy by Electra, expanding on the dynamic between a mother and her female child killing her (filling in a gap in knowledge, as most studies focus on matricide performed by a son)
 * Tor, Dana, 2022, "The Oresteia and the Act of Revenge: of Desire and Jouissance," PsyArt 27, pp. 58-73.
 * This source expands on the dynamic of matricide between mother and daughter, as well as the way that female jouissance operates in the context of revenge.
 * Jacobs, A. (2010) On Matricide: Myth, Psychoanalysis, and the Law of the Mother, 2007. New York: Columbia University Press
 * This source elaborates on Athena's motherless role in society, and how that functions into her legitamacy in the court proceedings of the Oresteia.
 * Jacobs, A. (2004). Towards a structural theory of matricide: psychoanalysis, the Oresteia and the maternal prohibition. Women: A Cultural Review, 15(1), 19–34. https://doi-org.turing.library.northwestern.edu/10.1080/0957404042000197170
 * This source introduces Jacobs' work on developing a theory of matricide.


 * Sonna V. Matricide and Sexual Difference in Plato’s Laws. Tópicos Revista de Filosofía. 2023;(67):11-34. doi:10.21555/top.v670.2372
 * This source introduces the basic beliefs on matricide in a Greek society, and how Plato's Laws reflected a socio-cultural attitude towards the mother and the woman.


 * Kilmartin, C. T., & Dervin, D. (1997). Inaccurate representation of the electra complex in psychology textbooks. Teaching of Psychology, 24(4), 269–270. https://doi-org.turing.library.northwestern.edu/10.1207/s15328023top2404_11
 * This source clarifies Jung's idea of the Electra Complex.
 * Britton, R. (1989) The missing link: Parental sexuality in the Oedipus complex. In: Steiner, J. (ed.), The Oedipus Complex Today (Chapter 2, pp. 83–101). London: Karnac.
 * This source elaborates on the Antigone-Athene Complex.
 * Daley L. Anti-Electra: The Radical Totem of the Girl. Elizabeth von Samsonow. Translated by Anita Fricek and Stephen Zepke, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2019 (ISBN: 978-15179-0713-6). Hypatia. 2023;38(2):e11. doi:10.1017/hyp.2022.20
 * This source explains Samsonow's beliefs on the liberation of the girl through new schools of thought on daughterhood and matricide.

Finalized list of sources

 * 1) Kilmartin, C. T., & Dervin, D. (1997). Inaccurate representation of the electra complex in psychology textbooks. Teaching of Psychology, 24(4), 269–270.
 * 2) Tor, Dana, 2022, "The Oresteia and the Act of Revenge: of Desire and Jouissance," PsyArt 27, pp. 58-73.
 * 3) Heller, Serena. “Matriarchy, Matricide and Mourning.” British Journal of Psychotherapy, vol. 39, no. 1, Feb. 2023, pp. 50–68.
 * 4) Britton, R. (1989) The missing link: Parental sexuality in the Oedipus complex. In: Steiner, J. (ed.), The Oedipus Complex Today (Chapter 2, pp. 83–101). London: Karnac.
 * 5) Jacobs, A. (2010) On Matricide: Myth, Psychoanalysis, and the Law of the Mother, 2007. New York: Columbia University Press
 * 6) Daley L. Anti-Electra: The Radical Totem of the Girl. Elizabeth von Samsonow. Translated by Anita Fricek and Stephen Zepke, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2019 (ISBN: 978-15179-0713-6). Hypatia. 2023;38(2):e11. doi:10.1017/hyp.2022.20
 * 7) Jacobs, A. (2004). Towards a structural theory of matricide: psychoanalysis, the Oresteia and the maternal prohibition. Women: A Cultural Review, 15(1), 19–34.