Jungian Psychology and the Human Sciences
1032694580, 9781032694580
This volume brings together selected papers from the 2021 IAJS conference focusing on Jungian psychology’s place within
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Pages 258
Year 2024
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Table of contents :
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
About the Authors
Introduction: Jungian Psychology and the Human Sciences
References
Introduction to “The Role of the Good-Enough All-Rounder in Jungian Studies: ‘Clinic and Academy’ Revisited”
Chapter 1: The Role of the Good-Enough All-Rounder in Jungian Studies: “Clinic and Academy” Revisited
Introduction
References
Part 1: Philosophical Foundations
Introduction to “The Way of the Daimon: From Jung’s Red Book to the Alchemical Imagination and the Reddening of Psychology”
Chapter 2: The Way of the Daimon: From Jung’s Red Book to the Alchemical Imagination and the Reddening of Psychology
Introduction
Notes
References
Introduction to “In the Gap between Phenomenology and Jungian Psychology: Cultivating a ‘Poetics’ of Psychological Life”
Chapter 3: In the Gap between Phenomenology and Jungian Psychology: Cultivating a “Poetics” of Psychological Life
Between Merleau-Ponty and Jung: A Poetics of Psychological Life
Phenomenology as a Poetic Realism
Or What’s a Metaphor?
The Need for a Therapy of Culture
Notes
References
Introduction to “Two Jungs: Two Sciences?”
Chapter 4: Two Jungs: Two Sciences?
Introduction
Jung’s Scientific Individuation
The Scientific Individuation of Analytical Psychology
Anti-science
Sub-science
The Archimedean Point?
A Syzygy? Nomad Science and State Science
The Red Book: Nomad Science in Action?
Conclusion
Notes
References
Introduction to “Archetypes, Embodiment, and Spontaneous Thought”
Chapter 5: Archetypes, Embodiment, and Spontaneous Thought
Introduction
Characteristics of the Archetypes
The Fate of the Archetype
Do Archetypes “Exist”?
Spontaneous Thought, Including Dream Content
Spontaneous Thought Is Organized by Affect and Is Embodied
Spontaneous Thoughts Seek Meaning
Embodied Cognition
The Symbolic Dimension of the Archetypal Image and Embodied Cognition
The Biological Dimension
The Archetype Integrated with Modern Embodied Theory
Conclusion
Notes
References
Part 2: The Social and Political Horizons
Introduction to “Healing Is Political”
Chapter 6: Healing Is Political
The Political
Jung and Lacan
Simondon and Stiegler
Notes
References
Introduction to “Hillman’s Ambivalence: An Inhuman Twist of Human Science”
Chapter 7: Hillman’s Ambivalence: An Inhuman Twist of Human Science
Introduction
Human Science and Psychology
Archetypal Psychology Is Not a (Natural) Science
Imagining Archetypal Psychology as a Human Science
The Twist
Note
References
Introduction to “Geography of Creative Thought: Walking with Freud and Nietzsche”
Chapter 8: Geography of Creative Thought: Walking with Freud and Nietzsche
Introduction: Relationships between Geography and Philosophy
Walking Philosophy
Walking and Thinking
Does the Way We Walk Influence the Kinds of Ideas We Have?
Does the Environment We Walk in Shape the Content of Our Ideas?
Nietzsche’s Thinking Places
Freud’s Thinking Places
Conclusion
Notes
References
Introduction to “An Archetypal Perspective on Anti-Homeless Architecture”
Chapter 9: An Archetypal Perspective on Anti-Homeless Architecture
Introduction
The Ethics of Beauty
Depersonification through Language
Whose Pathology?
The Dangers of Action
Psychologist as Activist
Conclusion
References
Introduction to “Encounters with African Elephants: Transformative Gatherings”
Chapter 10: Encounters with African Elephants: Transformative Gatherings
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Notes
References
Introduction to “Anatomy of a Vision: A Psychological Approach to the Papua New Guinea UFO Sightings, June 26–27, 1959”
Chapter 11: Anatomy of a Vision: A Psychological Approach to the Papua New Guinea UFO Sightings, June 26–27, 1959
Introduction
I
II
III
Notes
References
Part 3: Psychotherapy and Analysis
Introduction to “Jung’s Personal Confession”
Chapter 12: Jung’s Personal Confession
Rosarium Drawings
The Rosarium Today
Jung’s Shadow: Love Affairs with Ex-patients and His Fear of Vulnerability
Sabina Spielrein, MD (1885–1942)
Maria Moltzer, RN (1874–1944)
Enter Toni Wolff
Conclusion
Notes
References
Introduction to “Jung, Groddeck, and Analytic Technique”
Chapter 13: Jung, Groddeck, and Analytic Technique
Introduction
Physician-Philosopher Carl Gustav Carus as a Precursor to Groddeck and Jung
The Collaboration between Georg Groddeck and Sándor Ferenczi
Groddeck and Jung as Therapists
Natural Healing
Groddeck’s Followers
Jung’s Fundamental Rule and Analytic Method
The Couch Issue
Analytical Psychology and the Baden-Baden–Budapest Branch of Psychoanalysis
Notes
References
Introduction to “Jung and Kristeva: The Looking Glass between Self and Other”
Chapter 14: Jung and Kristeva: The Looking Glass between Self and Other
Introduction
The Example
The Abject
The Shadow
Trauma
Transcendent Function and the Symbolic
Summary
References
Introduction to “Ressentiment: Its Phenomenology and Clinical Significance”
Chapter 15: Ressentiment: Its Phenomenology and Clinical Significance
Introduction
The Phenomenology of Ressentiment
Value Inversion
Jung and the Feeling Function
Clinical Vignettes
Conclusion
References
Introduction to “From Grievous to Grief”
Chapter 16: From Grievous to Grief
Wade in the Water
Letting My Heart be Broken: Tears of Grief
References
Index