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Index
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Figures
Contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Notes
References
Part 1: The Jungian World
1. Jung’s Recollection of the Life-World
The Evaporation of World Into Dream
Jung As Heir to Galileo and Descartes
Jung’s Recollection of the World
Notes
References
Editor’s Introduction
2. Alchemy and the Subtle Body of Metaphor: Soul and Cosmos
Introduction
The Politics of Projection
The Gestural Body
Greeting Philemon
Alchemy and the Subtle Body of Metaphor
Philemon, Jung, and Phenomenology
Open to the Miracle: From Psychology to Cosmology
Postscript: Philemon and the Angel—A Confession
Notes
References
Editor’s Introduction
3. In Destitute Times: Archetype and Existence In Rilke’s Duino Elegies
“Who Came?”
The Kairos
Poetic Image: “Supreme Possibility of the Human Heart Itself”
The “Real World” and “That Strange Inner World”
Archetype I: “Floods of Origins”
Archetype II: Contour of Feeling—“A Matter of Locating Oneself In the World”
The Visible and the Invisible
Notes
References
Editor’s Introduction
4. The Anima Mundi and the Fourfold: Hillman and Heidegger On the “Idea” of the World
Psychologizing the Idea of the World
Psychologizing and Phenomenology
The Worldhood of the World
World As Fourfold
The Fourfold As Psychological Configuration
World and Things
Notes
References
Editor’s Introduction
5. Spirit In the Tube: The Life of Television
The Soul of Culture
Television As Fallen World
Television As Aphrodite
Tele-Vision As Subjectivist Mind
The Spirit In the Tube
Notes
References
Part 2: The Jungian Imagination
Editor’s Introduction
6. Jung’s Approach to the Phenomenology of Religious Experience: A View from the Consulting Room
References
Editor’s Introduction
7. Thanatos and Existence: Towards a Jungian Phenomenology of the Death Instinct
Introduction
Freud and Thanatos
Death In Jung’s Analysis of Existence
Death and the Heroic Ego
Death As Home to the Imagination
The Meaning of Death and the Death of Meaning
The Death Instinct: A Jungian Formulation
Concluding Thoughts
References
Editor’s Introduction
8. Mnemosyne and Lethe: Memory, Jung, Phenomenology
Mnemosyne and Lethe
It’s In Memories That We Steal
Recovering Loss
Notes
References
Editor’s Introduction
9. Eros and Psyche: A Reading of Neumann and Merleau-Ponty
The Original Story
The Archaic Body: A Recollection of Traces
Recollection: The Moment When Psyche Insights Eros
Language and the Song of Eros
Eros In Movement
Eros As Compassion
References
Editor’s Introduction
10. The Metaphor of Light and Its Deconstruction In Jung’s Alchemical Vision
Introduction
The Shadow of Vision
Jung’s Travel In Africa
The Hegemony of Vision
Movement Toward an Alchemical Vision
Tension and Development In Existential Phenomenology
The Alchemical Lumen Naturae: The Light of Nature
Light and Lumen: A Contemporary Dream
Conclusion
References
Part 3: Therapeutic Issues
Editor’s Introduction
11. Eros and Chaos: The Mysteries and Shadows of Love
Prologue
Introduction
Chaos-Order, Chaos-Eros
Dreaming the Work
Notes
References
Editor’s Introduction
12. Depth Psychology and the Liberation of Being
Free Association
Active Imagination
Liberating the Capacity to Play
Phenomenology’s Practice of World-Openness
Liberation Across Domains: Vignettes from Psychotherapy, Large-Group Dialogue, and “Theatre of the Oppressed”
References
Editor’s Introduction
13. Phenomenology, Analytical Psychology, and Play Therapy
Introduction
Phenomenology and Imagery-Communication
Jungian Play Therapy
Towards a Phenomenological Hermeneutic Approach
Note
References
Editor’s Introduction
14. Analyzing from the Self: An Empirical Phenomenology of the “Third” In Analysis
Introduction
Experiencing the Self In Analysis: First Person Reports
Jung’s Experience of the Self In Analysis
Analyzing from the Self: A Summary
A Phenomenological Description
Analyzing from the Self and Humility
References
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