Brodersen Glock Flyer

Transcription

Brodersen Glock Flyer
Forthcoming from Routledge
Jungian Perspectives on
Rebirth and Renewal
Phoenix rising
Edited by Elizabeth Brodersen, PhD., C. G. Jung
Institute, Switzerland, and Michael Glock, PhD.
November 2016: 312pp
Hb: 978-1-138-19309-3 | $190.00
Pb: 978-1-138-19312-3 | $52.95
eBook: 978-1-315-63955-0
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Editors’ Introduction. Part 1: The Phoenix as Symbol. Laughlin,
Phoenix Rising: A Comparative Study of the Phoenix Symbol as
a Goal of Alchemical Work and the Individuation Process. Part
2: Native America. Bernstein, Re-establishing Dialogue between
the Western Psyche and the Psyche-Left-Behind. Lacourt, Seeing
the forest for the Trees: Birthing Symbolic Life. Part 3: Synchronistic
symbols as liminal place/space. Singer, The Burden of Modernity:
Three ‘Takes’ on the Snake and Recombinant Visionary
Mythology. Dodson, Rebirthing Biblical Myth: ‘The Poisonwood
Bible’ as Visionary Art. Part 4: India. Rand, Life’s Threads: C.G.
Jung’s 1938 and 1944 ‘Orissa’ Awakenings. Sengupta, Parama
Pada Sopanam: The Divine Game of Rebirth and Renewal. Beebe,
Responses to a Film ‘Monsoon Wedding’ about Integrity. Part 5:
Primordial archetypal feminine. Essen, Remembering Eve’s
Transgression as Rebirth. Rowland, Symbolic Renewal; Renewal
of symbols, the Rebirth of the Trickster Goddesses in Mysteries.
Part 6: Ancestral memories: familial constellations of rebirth and
renewal. Strnad, Adam and Eve as a Kleinian Narrative of Infancy.
Nemeth, Symbols of Creation in Myth and Dreams: Directive,
Orientative, Regenerative. Barone-Chapman, Trickster, Trauma
and Transformation; Vicissitudes of Late Motherhood. Part 7:
Eco-psychological, synchronistic carriers of rebirth and renewal.
Nakamura, Archetypal Images in Japanese Anime Space
Battleship Yamato (Star Blazers). Demenkoff, Prometheus in Our
Midst: The Planet’s Overdependence on oxygen. Norton, Artic
Calving: Birthing A New Vision of the Earth through the Symbol
of Ice. Part 8: Mythopoetic, psychological dimensions of rebirth
and renewal. Fike, Visionary and Psychological: Jung’s 1925
seminar and H. Rider Haggard’s ‘She’. Schwartz, A Native
American Tale within Miss Frank Miller’s Fantasies- How the
Psyche Guides.
This collection of papers is inspired by the themes evoked
by the image of the phoenix and by Jung’s travels to the
USA, India and Africa in the 1920s and 1930s. The
international selection of contributors explore ideas that
range from the cultural complex to the trickster archetype,
life and death, and the experiences of indigenous
communities in the modern world. They use images,
literature, film, clinical and personal accounts in their
examinations of the psyche and its relation to
contemporary society. The book features a strong editorial
framework, locating each chapter within current academic
discourse, and as a whole presents a unique exploration of
this key area of Jung’s work.
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