Pathways into the Jungian world : phenomenology and analytical psychology / edited by Roger Brooke.

In Pathways into the Jungian World contributors from the disciplines of medicine, psychology and philosophy look at the central issues of commonality and difference between phenomenology and analytical psychology.

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via ProQuest)
Other Authors: Brooke, Roger, 1953-
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: London ; New York : Routledge, 2000.
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • BOOK COVER; HALF-TITLE; TITLE; COPYRIGHT; DEDICATION; CONTENTS; FIGURES; CONTRIBUTORS; ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS; INTRODUCTION; Notes; References; 1 JUNG'S RECOLLECTION OF THE LIFE-WORLD; The evaporation of world into dream; Jung as Heir to Galileo and Descartes; Jung's recollection of the world; Notes; References; 2 ALCHEMY AND THE SUBTLE BODY OF METAPHOR; Introduction; The politics of projection; The gestural body; Greeting Philemon; Alchemy and the subtle body of metaphor; Philemon, Jung, and Phenomenology; Open to the miracle: from psychology to cosmology.
  • Postscript: Philemon and the Angel-a confessionNotes; References; 3 IN DESTITUTE TIMES; "Who came?"; The kairos; Poetic image: "supreme possibility of the human heart itself"; The "real world" and "that strange inner world"; Archetype I: "floods of origins"; Archetype II: contour of feeling-"a matter of locating oneself in the world"; The visible and the invisible; Notes; References; 4 THE ANIMA MUNDI AND THE FOURFOLD; Psychologizing the idea of the world; Psychologizing and phenomenology; The worldhood of the world; World as fourfold; The fourfold as psychological configuration.
  • World and thingsNotes; References; 5 SPIRIT IN THE TUBE; The soul of culture; Television as fallen world; Television as Aphrodite; Tele-vision as subjectivist mind; The spirit in the tube; Notes; References; 6 JUNG'S APPROACH TO THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE; References; 7 THANATOS AND EXISTENCE; Introduction; Freud and Thanatos; Death in Jung's analysis of existence; Death and the heroic ego; Death as home to the imagination; The meaning of death and the death of meaning; The death instinct: a Jungian formulation; Concluding thoughts; References; 8 MNEMOSYNE AND LETHE.
  • Mnemosyne and LetheIt's in memories that we steal; Recovering loss; Notes; References; 9 EROS AND PSYCHE; The Original Story; The archaic body: a recollection of traces; Recollection: the moment when Psyche insights Eros; Language and the song of Eros; Eros in movement; Eros as compassion; References; 10 THE METAPHOR OF LIGHT AND ITS DECONSTRUCTION IN JUNG'S ALCHEMICAL VISION; Introduction; The shadow of vision; Jung's travel in Africa; The hegemony of vision; Movement toward an alchemical vision; Tension and development in existential phenomenology.
  • The alchemical lumen naturae: the light of natureLight and lumen: a contemporary dream; Conclusion; References; 11 EROS AND CHAOS; Prologue; Introduction; Chaos-Order, Chaos-Eros; Dreaming the work; Notes; References; 12 DEPTH PSYCHOLOGY AND THE LIBERATION OF BEING; Free association; Active imagination; Liberating the capacity to play; Phenomenology's practice of world-openness; Liberation across domains: vignettes from psychotherapy, large-group dialogue, and "Theatre of the Oppressed"; Psychotherapy; Large-group dialogue; Theatre of the oppressed and the liberation of desire; References.