Welcome! This site offers a variety of resources about Jungian Analytical Psychology. The Antioch University Seattle (AUS) Jungian Discussion Group monthly schedule is posted below (see schedule in right column). For questions or comments, please contact Ann Blake via AUS e-mail or stop by Ann's AUS campus office. You can also bring questions and comments to the AUS Jungian Discussion Group (see schedule in right column below).
See also:

Friday, August 31, 2012




Spring: A Journal of Archetype and Culture

Spring, founded in 1941, is the oldest Jungian psychology journal in the world. Published twice a year, each issue explores from the perspective of depth psychology a theme of contemporary relevance and contains articles as well as book and film reviews. Contributors include Jungian analysts, scholars from a wide variety of disciplines, and cultural commentators.

Native American Cultures and the Western Psyche: A Bridge Between
Spring: A Journal of Archetype and Culture, Volume 87
Guest Editor: Jerome S. Bernstein
ISBN: 978-1-935528-39-5
268 pp.
Price: $25.95
SUBSCRIBE to Spring Journal and SAVE up to 40% off the cover price.
One year (two issues) is $40.00 and two years (four issues) is $70.00, with free shipping within the United States. Your subscription will start with the Native American Cultures and the Western Psyche: A Bridge Between issue.
C.G. Jung and Lakota Sioux scholar Vine Deloria, Jr. recognized that Jungian psychology could serve as a bridge between Native American cultures and the Western psyche. To further this bridge-building, Spring Journal has invited Native American psychologists, scholars, and cultural commentators to share their insights upon the connections and disconnections between Native American cultures and the Western psyche, how each informs the other, and what helps or hinders a dialogue between them.


Editor's Introduction
Nancy Cater
Guest Editor's Introduction
Jerome S. Bernstein
A Review of C.G. Jung and the Sioux Traditions: Dreams, Visions, Nature, and the Primitive by Vine Deloria, Jr.
Joseph B. Stone
A Critique of Western Psychology from an American Indian Psychologist
Jeff King
Coming Home: Knowing Land, Knowing Self
Jeanne A. Lacourt
Historical Trauma and Colonialism—A Path Analysis: The Implications for Neurological and Developmental Psychopathology and Amelioration by Healing through Traditional Tribal Medicine Practices
Joseph B. Stone
Medicine Wheel, Mandala, and Jung
Eduardo Duran
Experiences in Navajo Healing
Frank Morgan
Becoming a Navajo Medicine Man
Johnson Dennison
The Inupiat Eskimo, the Land, the Ghosts, and Carl G. Jung
Catherine Swan Reimer
JUNGIANA
Celebrating the 75th Anniversary of Jung's Bailey Island Lectures: Carl Jung's The Bailey Island, Maine and New York City Seminars of 1936 and 1937
Richard P. Brown
FILM ESSAY
Reflections on The Tree of Life, a film by Terrence Malick
Linda Schierse Leonard
BOOK REVIEWS
The Ecocritical Psyche by Susan Rowland
Terrie Waddell
Jung and Film II: The Return: Further Post-Jungian Takes on the Moving Image by Christopher Hauke and Luke Hockley, eds.
William G. Doty
The More of Myth: A Pedagogy of Diversion by Mary Aswell Doll
Dennis Patrick Slattery
Gathering the Light: A Jungian View of Meditation by V. Walter Odajnyk
Dennis Patrick Slattery
*****
Upcoming Issues of Spring Journal:
ENVIRONMENTAL DISASTERS AND COLLECTIVE TRAUMA
Spring: A Journal of Archetype and Culture, Vol. 88
Publication Date: November, 2012
Guest Co-Editor: Stephen J. Foster, Ph.D., Jungian analyst and environmental scientist, author of Risky Business: A Jungian View of Environmental Disasters and the Nature Archetype
BUDDHISM AND DEPTH PSYCHOLOGY: REFINING THE ENCOUNTER
Spring: A Journal of Archetype and Culture, Vol. 89
Publication Date: Spring 2013
Guest Editor: Polly Young Eisendrath, Ph.D., Jungian analyst, author, and editor (with Shoji Muramoto) of Awakening and Insight: Zen Buddhism and Psychotherapy
JUNG AND INDIA
Spring: A Journal of Archetype and Culture, Vol. 90
Publication Date: Fall 2013
Guest Editors: Al Collins, Ph.D., Sanskrit scholar and psychologist, and Elaine Molchanov, Jungian analyst












No comments:

Post a Comment