by C.G. Jung Institute of Santa Fe | Apr 3, 2020
Donald Kalsched, Ph.D. When Bruno Bettelheim published The Uses of Enchantment: The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales in 1989, controversies erupted about how all the violence in the Grimm’s tales might traumatize our children or provoke them to violent behavior....
by C.G. Jung Institute of Santa Fe | Mar 13, 2020
STEVEN HERRMANN, Ph.D., MFT and LORI GOLDRICH, Ph.D. Jung described active imagination as a technique for discovering the mythopoetic images hidden in the emotions. Jung modeled this method in his Red Book. A related technique is what Walt Whitman called Vocalism....
by C.G. Jung Institute of Santa Fe | Feb 14, 2020
Pamela Power, Ph.D. Jung wrote that visionary art provides a compensatory function to the time in which it is produced. If we can recognize what art expresses, we can be more deeply aware of the culture in which we live. This presentation will provide a brief...
by C.G. Jung Institute of Santa Fe | Jan 24, 2020
Guilford Dudley, Ph.D. and Monika Wikman, Ph.D. As we continue to pass scientific thresholds of no return, two major psychological issues are emerging. One is our proclivity for self-deception and avoidance — dissociation from a reality staring us in the face like the...
by C.G. Jung Institute of Santa Fe | Sep 13, 2019
Frances Hatfield, Ph.D. For the past 2,500 years, the development of human consciousness in the West has been shaped and dominated by an archetype which the ancient Greeks knew as Zeus. The Age of Zeus, instigated by the great goddesses themselves, has presided over...
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