The Cambridge Companion to Jung 2nd Edition by Polly Young-Eisendrath, Terence Dawson – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 0521685001, 9780521685009
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ISBN 10: 0521685001
ISBN 13: 9780521685009
Author: Polly Young-Eisendrath, Terence Dawson
This second edition represents a wide-ranging critical introduction to the psychology of Carl Jung, one of the founders of psychoanalysis. Including two new essays and thorough revisions of most of the original chapters, it constitutes a radical assessment of his legacy. Andrew Samuels’ introduction succinctly articulates the challenges facing the Jungian community. The fifteen essays set Jung in the context of his own time, outline the current practice and theory of Jungian psychology and show how Jungians continue to question and evolve his thinking and apply it to aspects of modern culture and psychoanalysis. The volume includes a full chronology of Jung’s life and work, extensively revised and up to date bibliographies, a case study and a glossary. It is an indispensable reference tool for both students and specialists, written by an international team of Jungian analysts and scholars from various disciplines.
The Cambridge Companion to Jung 2nd Table of contents:
PART I: Jung’s ideas and their context
1 The historical context of analytical psychology
2 Freud, Jung, and psychoanalysis
Freud and Oedipus
Freudian correspondence
The eternal triangle
Sabina Spielrein
Oedipus revisited
3 The creative psyche: Jung’s major contributions
Jung’s view of the psyche
The subjective path to objective awareness
The Jungian model and its dynamics
The creative and symbolic use of unconscious material
Conclusion
4 Psychic imaging: a bridge between subject and object
Originary principles
A brief history of image
The Medieval view of imaging
The alchemists: some marginal figures
The birth of modernity
Empiricism: toward an arbitrary fictionalism
The liberation of imaging
Image and archetype in depth psychology
Psychic reality
Post-structuralism and the linguistic turn
A bridge to the sublime
PART II: Analytical psychology in practice
5 The classical Jungian school
Why classical?
The inner world
The process of individuation
The conflict of opposites
The practical significance of the unexpected
The ultimate goal
6 The archetypal school
Jung on archetypes and archetypal images
James Hillman and archetypal psychology
Re-visioning psychology and sticking to the image
Image, object, subject
Relativization versus compensation
Imagination against interpretation
Multiplicity
Polytheism versus monotheism
Mythology
Soul-in-the-world and soul-making
Social and political activism
Post-structuralism, post-modernism
The institutionalization of archetypal psychology
7 The developmental school
Introduction
The historical context
Klein, Winnicott, Bion: London Object Relations
Relatedness in the analytic setting: transference and countertransference
Infant observation
Fordham’s model
Recent developments
Conclusion
8 Transference and countertransference
Transference
Transference as a fact of life
Transference and the “real” relationship
Transference is a form of projection
Transference has an archetypal dimension
Transference in the service of individuation
Jung’s understanding of the transference
Post-Jungian developments
Countertransference
9 Me and my anima: through the dark glass of the Jungian/Freudian interface
2007 Addendum
10 The case of Joan: classical, archetypal, and developmental approaches
Joan
A classical approach
An archetypal approach
A developmental approach
PART III: Analytical psychology in society
11 Jung and Buddhism: refining the dialogue
Complex and karma
A Buddhist Jungian account of self and ego
A psychotherapeutic perspective on no-self
Jung’s apparent negativity about Buddhism for Westerners
12 A Jungian analysis of Homer’s Odysseus
13 Literary criticism and analytical psychology
“Where we come from”: Jung and literary criticism
(1) Not dogma but working hypothesis
(2) Not surface but depth
(3) Not hero but text
(4) The social significance of art
(5) A historico-cultural theory
(6) Reader-response/personal myth
“What are we”: a short history of Jungian criticism
“Where are we going”: the challenge facing Jungian criticism
14 Jung and politics
A critique of Jung’s political thought
The psychological development of the person: individuation
Stage one: the emergence of ego consciousness
Stage two: the alienation of the ego
Stage three: the relativization of the ego
The political development of the person: conscientization
Stage one: magical consciousness
Stage two: naive consciousness
Stage three: critical consciousness
Psychological and political development of the person: implications for democracy
Conclusion: the prospects for Jungian psychopolitical analysis
15 Jung and religion: the opposing self
Why Jung on religion?
Immediate experience and psychic reality
Ego and Self, the gap and God-images
Official religion
Religious instinct and society
Individuation
The archetypal and the body
God-images and evil
The transcendent function and synchronicity
Method
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