This book has a similar, though not identical, format to Who Owns Psychoanalysis? in being divided into sections as follows: academic, clinical, history, philosophy, science. Who Owns Jung aims to be a celebration of the diversity and interdisciplinary thinking that is a feature of the international Jungian community. Many of the contributors are practising analysts and members of the International Association for Analytical Psychology; others are scolars of Jung whose work has been influential in disseminating his ideas in the academy, though it is worth noting that a number of the analysts also work in academe.
Contributors:
James Asto; Astrid Berg; Joe Cambray; Ann Casement; Andrea Cone-Farran; Roberto Gambin; Wolfgang Giegerich; Joseph Henderson; George B. Hogenson; Mario Jacoby; Hayao Kawai; Toshio Kawai; Thomas B. Kirsch; Jean Knox; Roderick Main; Denise Gimenez Ramos; Sonu Shamdasani; Michael Sinason; Hester McFarland Solomon; David Tacey; and Margaret Wilkinson.
Edited by:
Ann Casement
Imprint: Karnac Books
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 230mm,
Width: 147mm,
Spine: 30mm
Weight: 566g
ISBN: 9781855754034
ISBN 10: 1855754037
Pages: 376
Publication Date: 24 May 2007
Audience:
College/higher education
,
Professional and scholarly
,
Professional & Vocational
,
Primary
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
>ContentsPART I. ACADEMIC Jung in Japanese academy by Toshio Kawai Ruptured time and the re-mythologization of modernity by Dr Roderick Main Who owns Jungian psychology? Jung in Brazilian academia by Denise Gimenez Ramos, The challenge of teaching Jung in the university by David Tacey PART II. CLINICALAnalytical psychology and Michael Fordham by James Astor Can we prevent colonization of the mind? Traditional culture in South Africa by Astrid Berg The new, the now and the nowhere in Kalsched's archetypal self-care system by M.D.A. Sinason and A.M. Cone-Farran PART III. HISTORYSome memories and reflections concerning my time at the C.G.Jung Institute in Zurich (1956 until 2006) by Mario Jacoby The legacy of C.G. Jung by Thomas B. Kirsch Philemon foundation by Sonu Shamdasani in collaboration with Ann Casement The incomplete works of Jung by Sonu Shamdasani The founding of the Journal of Analytical Psychology by Ann Casement PART IV. PHILOSOPHYReconsidering imitation by Joe Cambray Psychology-the study of the soul's logical life by Wolfgang Giegerich The transcendent function and Hegel's dialectical vision by Hester McFarland Solomon PART V. SCIENCEFrom moments of meeting to archetypal consciousness: emergence and the fractal structure of analytic practice by George B. Hogenson, PhD Who owns the unconscious? or Why psychoanalysts need to 'own' Jung by Jean Knox Jung and neuroscience: the making of mind by Margaret Wilkinson
Ann Casement is a training analyst at the Association of Jungian Analysts, London, which she represents on the IAAP executive committee. She is also a member of the British Psychological Society, The National Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis, and a founding member of The International Neuro-Psychoanalysis Society. She has conducted research into statutory regulation at the University of London and has written for 'The Economist' and professional journals.
Reviews for Who Owns Jung?
'This collection of essays meets the critical challenge of presenting both the core of traditional Jungian theory and the emergent edge of current Jungian thought. Through her selections and expert editing, Casement invites the professional practitioner and lay reader to engage an analytic approach to the psyche that makes the therapeutic enterprise more vital and the considered life multi-dimensional.'- Beverley Zabriskie, Jungian Psychoanalytic Association, New York.ContentsPART I. ACADEMIC Jung in Japanese academy by Toshio Kawai Ruptured time and the re-mythologization of modernity by Dr Roderick Main Who owns Jungian psychology? Jung in Brazilian academia by Denise Gimenez Ramos, The challenge of teaching Jung in the university by David Tacey PART II. CLINICALAnalytical psychology and Michael Fordham by James Astor Can we prevent colonization of the mind? Traditional culture in South Africa by Astrid Berg The new, the now and the nowhere in Kalsched's archetypal self-care system by M.D.A. Sinason and A.M. Cone-Farran PART III. HISTORYSome memories and reflections concerning my time at the C.G.Jung Institute in Zurich (1956 until 2006) by Mario Jacoby The legacy of C.G. Jung by Thomas B. Kirsch Philemon foundation by Sonu Shamdasani in collaboration with Ann Casement The incomplete works of Jung by Sonu Shamdasani The founding of the Journal of Analytical Psychology by Ann Casement PART IV. PHILOSOPHYReconsidering imitation by Joe Cambray Psychology-the study of the soul's logical life by Wolfgang Giegerich The transcendent function and Hegel's dialectical vision by Hester McFarland Solomon PART V. SCIENCEFrom moments of meeting to archetypal consciousness: emergence and the fractal structure of analytic practice by George B. Hogenson, PhD Who owns the unconscious? or Why psychoanalysts need to 'own' Jung by Jean Knox Jung and neuroscience: the making of mind by Margaret Wilkinson ContributorsJames Astor, Astrid Berg, Joe Cambray, Ann Casement, Andrea Cone-Farran, Roberto Gambini, Wolfgang Giegerich, Joseph Henderson, George B. Hogenson, Mario Jacoby, Hayao Kawai, Toshio Kawai, Thomas B. Kirsch, Jean Knox, Roderick Main, Denise Gimenez Ramos, Sonu Shamdasani, Michael Sinason, Hester McFarland Solomon, David Tacey, Margaret Wilkinson