Presenting a collection of diary entries made by British psychiatrist E A Bennet, during his visits with the Swiss analyst C G Jung, E A Bennet reveals Jung's personality and his extraordinary mind. He also introduces Jungian psychology while providing a perspective into Jung's life and work.
In 1983, Swiss psychiatrist C A Meier delivered a fascinating paper at the 3rd World Wilderness Congress in Inverness, Scotland. This work consists of Meier's original address and thoughtful and provocative responses by nine concerned writers from around the world.
In 1983, Swiss psychiatrist C A Meier delivered a fascinating paper at the 3rd World Wilderness Congress in Inverness, Scotland. This work consists of Meier's original address and thoughtful and provocative responses by nine concerned writers from around the world.
Contains contributions reflecting on the meaning and significance of analytical work from Jungian analysts from around the world. The contributors include Alfred Ziegler and Adolph Guggenbuhl-Craig from Zurich, Rafael Lopez-Pedraza from Caracas, and Aldo Carotenuto from Rome.
The biblical Book of Ruth is a story of love between women and between man and woman. This title presents a woman's subjective reactions to the story of Ruth, Naomi and Orpah along with further amplifications from Kabbalah into the meaning of these women who carry aspects of the Shekhinah, the feminine presence of God.
Gives an eyewitness report of a rail journey from Ravensbruck, north of Berlin, to Burgau, near Munich, one of the countless such operations that took place within Nazi Germany's vast network of labour and concentration camps. This work is a diary kept by a young Hungarian woman, Eva Danos, during her deportation by the Nazis in 1945.
Reflects the themes from 50 years of Susan Bach's analytical work with spontaneous pictures and in her 'blue room'. This book shows how the work of connecting and finding meaning continues and advances, whether through pictures, objects, dreams or other images and myths.
Speaks of the centrality of imagination in the life of spirit. This book describes imagination as a bridge between the psyche and the spirit. It aims to unlock the healing power of our imagination.
Analyses dream material which touch upon many subjects associated with the nature of the psyche, not only those relevant to pregnant women. This book acts as an aid for understanding of dreams, suitable to psychologists, doctors, midwives or anyone else interested in this human subject.
Presents the stories from the African Bush which carry universal observations and truths and, with their historical and ethnographic roots in the African Bushman culture. They bear testimony to a desert people living at one with Nature.
Catharine (Katy) Cabot, an American in Europe, was a patient of Jung's and also a part of his Zurich circle from the 1930's through the 1940's. Here, she records the details of her sessions with him along with other inner and outer events.
Presents a collection of Bushman tales and looks into the life of those little-known people. This edition reproduces the English text of the 1911 edition and is illustrated with photographs.
The Fifteenth Triannual Congress of the International Association for Analytical Psychology (IAAP) took place on the grounds of St John's College in Cambridge, England from 19 to 24 August 2001. This volume presents the papers comprising the program.
Presents a collection of folktales from long ago, of the creation of the world, of the ways of animals, of the beguiling Coyote, of the world in which we live and other worlds that hide just beyond our sight. Drawn from the oral literatures of South-western American Indian peoples, these stories teach us about the constants of many places.
Demonstrates the importance of confronting our unconscious selves and allowing our images of God - both positive and negative - to surface. This book shows us how to explore our unconscious selves and how this spiritual exercise can change our lives: how we respond to God, how we relate to others, and how we view ourselves.