How can science and religion co-exist in the modern discipline of psychotherapy? Written in flowing, easily-read language "A Dream in the World" details a classical Jungian analysis of a woman's... (more)
Jung and Searles is the first in-depth integration of the psychotherapeutic models of C.G. Jung and Harold F. Searles. Combining Jung's theoretical depths with Searles' liberating approach to the... (more)
Originally published in 1927, this little book was an attempt to present to the layperson, the principal psychological views and theories of C.G. Jung. It is written in simple and nontechnical... (more)
Jung and Educational Theory offers a new take on Jung's work, providing original, rich and informative material on his impact on educational research.
* Explores Jung's writing from the standpoint... (more)
Archetype and Character introduces a new typology based on unconscious motivations. It relies on C. G. Jung's description of the unconscious as composed of a personal and an archetypal layer. The... (more)
In this book, Tjeu van den Berk examines C. G. Jung's personal perspective on art and how his work intensely engages with this theme. It analyses Jung's profound reflections on artistic... (more)
Examining American psychology's development from a Jungian perspective, Jennings argues that the discipline is at a point where a deeper and broader exploration of spirituality is essential in order... (more)
Offers a Jungian perspective on the Chinese tradition of footbinding and considers how it can be used as a metaphor for the suffering of women and the repression of the feminine, as well as a symbol... (more)
The publication of W. Pauli's Scientific Correspondence has motivated a vast research activity on Pauli's role in modern science. This treatise sheds light on the ongoing dialogue between physics and... (more)
Jungian psychoanalyst Charlotte Mathes experienced a parent's worst nightmare-the death of her child. In this book, she describes her experience of struggling to find meaning and wholeness in one of... (more)
Dreams have profound implications for the physical and spiritual realm, for the body as well as for the psyche. The innovative dream-work procedures developed in this book are instruments that help... (more)
Martin Buber and others argue that C. G. Jung excludes divine transcendence from his understanding of the psyche. This book identifies the underpinnings of such criticisms, then examines Jung's... (more)
The unvarying essential meanings of around 1,000 symbols and symbolic themes commonly found in the art, literature and thought of all cultures through the ages are clarified. (more)
The author asks the question 'whatever happened to silence?' and shows the answer to be that it is always there, submerged under a toxic barrage of noise, and points out how the underlying silence... (more)
Expounds upon the archetypal images of anima and animus to present a thoughtful and exciting book that explains some of the suffering and midunderstanding that block development and the ability to... (more)
A study of the functioning of small groups from the empirical perspective of analytical psychology. The focus is on the expansion of consciousness in a group and individual transformation. 248 pages. (more)