ABSTRACT For the choreographer Martha Graham, the personal became politicised because she used Jungian psychology and its archetypes to reveal and make ‘universal’ what she and Cold Warriors called ‘the soul of mankind’. Graham thereby became useful as pro-Western, and particularly pro-United States (US), propaganda as she and her company toured Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. Post-World War II (WWII) networks shared a Jungian approach to psychology seeded by Carl Jung, the first president of the International Psychiatric Association in 1907. During WWII, the US Office of Strategic Services (OSS) in Switzerland under Allen Dulles relied on Jung’s work. During the postwar period, Graham entered therapy with Jung’s American protégée, Frances Wickes. Dulles became the first civilian director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Because the post-WWII fight against the Soviet Union was ideological, and utilised psychwar strategies, ‘total warfare’ included the consistent US government deployment of psychwar and Martha Graham. Graham’s highly profound, personal works about the inner working of mankind through the Jungian use of archetypes became politicised when they were staged internationally by the US government between 1955 and 1987. The article uses Graham’s letters to Wickes to support the argument.