"The Collective Self offers a compelling account of mirror imagery as a mode of self-understanding. Ugolnik shows how reflections blur the boundaries between self, other, and divine, challenging the assumption that collective or fragmented subjectivity is a modern development. By reading mirrored language as the site of a gaze that is neither simply interior nor exterior, Ugolnik reframes how we think about communion, empathy, and divine encounter. This book makes a rigorous and original contribution to the intellectual history of the self and to ongoing conversations about vision, relationality, and theological anthropology." - Emily R. Cain, Loyola University Chicago