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Syndicate
The Jung Page is dedicated to exploring questions of meaning which engage the individual as well as the varied cultures in which we live. This conversation is greatly enlarged by the contributions of C. G. Jung, (1875-1961) and the rich permutations of analytical psychology which continue to develop. Here you will find original essays, reprinted articles, reviews of books and films, research tools, a lexicon of terms, and works of creativity. You will also find ways to connect with the worldwide Jungian community, including information on publishers, local societies and professional organizations, scholars, analysts, and other interested individuals. We are here to serve you, and we welcome any suggestions you may have for improving this site.
We run great risks when we ignore the spiritual and the divine in psychotherapy, argues Kathryn Wood Madden in Dark Light of the Soul, an exploration of the psychological journeys of Jacob Boehme and C.G. Jung. Our thanks to the journal Quadrant and reviewer Dennis Patrick Slattery for their kind permission to make this available online.
The Philemon Foundation is proud to announce that The Red Book will be published on October 7, 2009 by W.W. Norton and Co. The publication will coincide with The Red Book of C.G. Jung: Creation of a New Cosmology, an exhibition of Jung's original text at the Rubin Museum of Art in New York, October 7, 2009 - January 25, 2010. Click here to learn more.
Psychotherapist Steve Silverton offers a passionate defense of the improvisatory freedom of therapeutic professionals -- and consequently the freedom of those seeking care -- against the increasing pressure on those practicing beyond the currently validated therapeutic modalities.
In his doctoral dissertation for the University of Peshwar, Pakistan, Ismail Wali enriches our understanding of Shakespeare's great work by mining the rich symbolic terrain of the syzygies, or complementary opposites, woven throughout the text. Further chapters will appear here in the coming months.
The Petros M.Nomikos Foundation will host "Ancient Greece/Modern Psyche" Sept. 2-4, 2009 in Santorini, Greece. Featured presenters will include Luigi Zoja, Ronald Schenk, Thomas Singer, Betty de Shong Meador, and others. To view a complete conference description, click here.
James Hollis reviews books by Charlotte Mathes and Mary Jane Hurley Brant, which address the difficult task of moving forward after the death of a child.
Italian psychiatrist Massimo Lanzaro explores the concept of the shadow -- that part of us we fail to see or know -- in this review of Harold Ramis' film Groundhog Day.
The International Analytical Psychology
Student Program is an advanced training opportunity offered by the C.
G. Jung Institute of San Francisco (SFJI) in collaboration with the
Institute of Transpersonal Psychology (ITP) in Palo Alto, California.
The program, now in its 13th year, offers a two-year course of
intensive study in analytical psychology to a mental health
professional from a country where formal Jungian analytic training is
not available. The Institute is pleased to invite
applications to become its International Student for the two-year
period, September 1, 2009 - August 31, 2011. Applications for this
position will be accepted from December 1, 2008 through January 31,
2009. To learn more, click the title above.
The Michigan Friends of Jung are calling for program proposals for our 2010-2011 lecture series. We are a small, non-profit group eager to welcome speakers specializing in aspects of Jung's psychology. The programs are usually held on the third Friday of the month from January through April, and then October and November in the Detroit area. We offer a modest fee, some travel/accommodation assistance, and a devoted, enthusiastic audience. To submit summaries for board consideration, please contact Cheri McLaughlin at 810-625-7450 or cherimclau@comcast.net.
In a review originally published in Round Table Review, Mary Stamper considers the impact of The Logos of the Soul, a little-known work by the late Jungian analyst Evangelos Christou (our thanks to Dolores Brien for her editorial - and detective - work on this essay).
The Philemon Foundation (www.philemonfoundation.org) is presenting the Second Philemon Foundation Seminar on Jung History, to be held November 21-23, 2008, in Toronto, Canada. Click the title above for more information.