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Jungian Psychology and the Human Sciences

Roger Brooke Camilla Giambonini Brianna Stich

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Paperback

Forthcoming
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English
Routledge
10 December 2024
This volume brings together selected papers from the 2021 IAJS conference focusing on Jungian psychology’s place within the broader human science field, with contributions providing an interdisciplinary examination of fields such as psychoanalysis, feminism, critical thought, and eco-psychology.

The historical foundations of Jungian thought in phenomenology, hermeneutics, the significance of imagination, and the body’s genetics open the book with outstanding essays from both renowned and aspiring new scholars. Chapters highlighting matters of current social, political, and ecological considerations shed light on the intersections between Jungian psychology and much contemporary thought in these fields. The healing process takes center stage in the last part of the book, which will interest readers involved with the broader psychotherapy field.

With rigorous and scholarly contributions from a variety of international figures in analytical psychology, this book will be of great interest to all Jungian and depth psychology scholars, students, and analysts in training, as well as readers in the broader human science psychology field interested in current Jungian psychology and phenomenology.
Edited by:   , ,
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
ISBN:   9781032694993
ISBN 10:   1032694998
Pages:   246
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Introduction: Jungian Psychology and the Human Sciences 1. The Role of the Good-Enough All-Rounder in Jungian Studies: “Clinic and Academy” Revisited Part 1: Philosophical Foundations 2. The Way of the Daimon: From Jung’s Red Book to the Alchemical Imagination and the Reddening of Psychology 3. In the Gap between Phenomenology and Jungian Psychology: Cultivating a ‘Poetics’ of Psychological Life 4. Two Jungs: Two Sciences? 5. Archetypes, Embodiment, and Spontaneous Thought Part 2: The Social and Political Horizons 6. Healing is Political 7. Hillman’s Ambivalence: An Inhuman Twist of Human Science 8. Geography of Creative Thought: Walking with Freud and Nietzsche 9. An Archetypal Perspective on Anti-Homeless Architecture 10. Encounters with African Elephants: Transformative Gatherings 11. Anatomy of a Vision: A Psychological Approach to the Papua New Guinea UFO Sightings, June 26-27, 1959 Part 3: Psychotherapy and Analysis 12. Jung’s Personal Confession 13. Jung, Groddeck, and Analytic Technique 14. Jung and Kristeva: The Looking Glass between Self and Other 15. Ressentiment: Its Phenomenology and Clinical Significance 16. Froom Grievous to Grief

Roger Brooke, PhD, ABPP, is Professor Emeritus of Psychology at Duquesne University, Pittsburgh and a Board Certified Clinical Psychologist and psychotherapist in private practice. He is author of numerous articles on Jungian psychology, phenomenology, psychoanalysis, and psychotherapy, but is best known for his book, Jung and Phenomenology, Classic Edition, (Routledge 1991/2015). Camilla Giambonini, PhD, is a lecturer in forensic psychology at the University of Gloucestershire and a member of the Board of Directors of the International Association for Jungian Studies. Her PhD thesis focused on teenage sexting and the psychosocial articulation of Jungian psychology. Currently, she is a psychodynamic psychotherapy trainee at the Society of Analytical Psychology in London. Brianna Stich, MA, is a fourth-year doctoral student in clinical psychology at Duquesne University. Brianna is currently writing her dissertation on hoarded homes and the phenomenological and psychoanalytic meanings of their spaces, things, and interrelationship with the bodies which dwell there.

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