C.G. Jung on Therapy [online
text]
Why Explore Jungian Psychology? [online
text]
Primary Videos
What
is Depth Psychology?
[1:50 mins.] [Stephen Aizenstat, founding president of Pacifica Graduate
Institute]
James Hollis:
Commenting on Analytical Psychology
[2:16 mins.] [James Hollis is a Jungian analyst in private practice
in Washington, D.C.] [Hollis talks about taking up Jungian psychology
and on the nature of "depth psychology"; reference to the
soul, and the need to live our lives more consciously; reference to
the "shadow"; reference to statement that Jung made about
neurosis] [active imagination]
June Singer:
Boundaries of the Soul
[7:30 mins.] [Jeffrey Mishlove, Thinking Allowed] [end presentation
at 4:02 mins.] [where Singer comments talking individuation and Jungian
analysis; later reference to soul and "totality of the person"]
Psychotherapy
Based on Depth Psychology
[8:08 mins.] [Lionel Corbett] [full
version of the interview :: 28:59 mins] [reference to CBT and
the contrast with depth psychology]
What Happens
in Analysis?
[10:13 mins.] [John Betts, a Victoria, Canada Jungian psychoanalyst,
discusses what happens in Jungian analytic sessions; analysis address
many of the core issues in life; contends that, ultimately, what we
are try to address "what is the psyche pointing you toward"
("what is the meaning you give to the way you live"; we
need to know not just what the ego is saying, but how the unconsciously
is symbolically representing itself] [end class viewing at 4:29 mins.]
On Jungian Analysis & Analysts
Note: In reading and thinking about Jung, I have always found Jungian
analysts talking about their work with patients a grounded
way of approaching Jung's ideas about the psyche and the unconscious.
A book in this genre I recommend is June Singer's Boundaries of
the Soul: The Practice of Jung's Psychology (Garden City, New
York: Doubleday, 1972). Additional works by Jungian analysts about
their work include: J. Marvin Spiegelman (ed.), Jungian Analysts:
Their Visions and Vulnerabilities (Phoenix: Falcon Press, 1988)
and Murray Stein (ed.), Jungian Analysis (Boulder, Colorado:
Shambhala, 1982).
Jung Institutes
C.G.
Jung Institute Boston | C.G.
Jung Institute of New York
C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles
| C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco
C.G. Jung Institute of Chicago
| C.G. Jung Institute of Dallas
Philadelphia
Jung Institute | Inter-Regional Society
Jungian Analysts
Reference & Resources on Jung Compiled for the Course
A Documentary: C.G. Jung
Unconscious
Complexes
Persona and Shadow
Individuation
Collective Unconscious
Archetype of the Self
Dreams
Jung's Red Book and Active
Imagination Psychological
Types and Functions
Active Imagination
Reference (Lionel Corbett | Depth Psychology in Psychotherapy)