Collected Writings of Giles Clark
Recycling Madness with Jung, Spinoza and Santayana
Herausgeber: Pickering, Judith; Samuel, Geoffrey
Collected Writings of Giles Clark
Recycling Madness with Jung, Spinoza and Santayana
Herausgeber: Pickering, Judith; Samuel, Geoffrey
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This timeless and thought-provoking volume makes available the collected writings of Giles Clark (1947-2019), whose original clinical theory constitutes a major contribution to the areas of analytical psychology, psychoanalysis, and philosophy.
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This timeless and thought-provoking volume makes available the collected writings of Giles Clark (1947-2019), whose original clinical theory constitutes a major contribution to the areas of analytical psychology, psychoanalysis, and philosophy.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 326
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. September 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 657g
- ISBN-13: 9781032187068
- ISBN-10: 1032187069
- Artikelnr.: 70200025
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 326
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. September 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 657g
- ISBN-13: 9781032187068
- ISBN-10: 1032187069
- Artikelnr.: 70200025
Judith Pickering is a psychoanalytic psychotherapist, Jungian analyst and couple and family therapist in Sydney, Australia. She is the author of Being in Love: Therapeutic Pathways Through Psychological Obstacles to Love (Routledge, 2008); The Search for Meaning in Psychotherapy: Spiritual Practice, the Apophatic Way and Bion (Routledge, 2019). Geoffrey Samuel is a retired social, cultural and medical anthropologist. His books include Mind, Body and Culture (1990), Civilized Shamans (1993) and The Origins of Yoga and Tantra (2008). He is interested in mind-body interaction and healing in anthropological theory, in Buddhist practice and in dialogue between traditions of knowledge.
Introduction to Collected Writings of Giles Clark 1. A process of
transformation: Spiritual puer, instinctual shadow and instinctual spirit
2. A black hole in psyche 3. Animation through the analytical relationship:
The embodiment of self in the transference and countertransference 4. How
much Jungian theory is there in my practice? 5. The animating body:
Psychoid substance as a mutual experience of psychosomatic disorder 6.
Mind-body intimacies and pains 7. A Spinozan lens onto the confusions of
borderline relations 8. A Jungian inheritance of lack and loss: Reflections
on my Jungian ancestry 9. The active use of the analyst's bodymind: as it
is informed by psychic disturbances 10. Symbolising and not-symbolising 11.
Romantic catastrophes and other vital realities 12. Embodied
countertransference and recycling the mad matter of symbolic equivalence
13. Unconscious structures and defences 14. On psychosis 15. Herder's
force: pluralism, expressivism, mind-body relations and empathy 16.
Psychoid relations in the transferential/countertransferential field of
personality disorders 17. Towards a psychoanalytic Spinoza: Reflections on
his philosophy and the psychotherapeutic mind 18. Why (and how) psychoid
relations matter 19. The matter of an oddly embodied mind: My spiritual
travels with a faithful but savage 'pet dog' 20. Last jottings Bibliography
of works by Giles Clark
transformation: Spiritual puer, instinctual shadow and instinctual spirit
2. A black hole in psyche 3. Animation through the analytical relationship:
The embodiment of self in the transference and countertransference 4. How
much Jungian theory is there in my practice? 5. The animating body:
Psychoid substance as a mutual experience of psychosomatic disorder 6.
Mind-body intimacies and pains 7. A Spinozan lens onto the confusions of
borderline relations 8. A Jungian inheritance of lack and loss: Reflections
on my Jungian ancestry 9. The active use of the analyst's bodymind: as it
is informed by psychic disturbances 10. Symbolising and not-symbolising 11.
Romantic catastrophes and other vital realities 12. Embodied
countertransference and recycling the mad matter of symbolic equivalence
13. Unconscious structures and defences 14. On psychosis 15. Herder's
force: pluralism, expressivism, mind-body relations and empathy 16.
Psychoid relations in the transferential/countertransferential field of
personality disorders 17. Towards a psychoanalytic Spinoza: Reflections on
his philosophy and the psychotherapeutic mind 18. Why (and how) psychoid
relations matter 19. The matter of an oddly embodied mind: My spiritual
travels with a faithful but savage 'pet dog' 20. Last jottings Bibliography
of works by Giles Clark
Introduction to Collected Writings of Giles Clark 1. A process of
transformation: Spiritual puer, instinctual shadow and instinctual spirit
2. A black hole in psyche 3. Animation through the analytical relationship:
The embodiment of self in the transference and countertransference 4. How
much Jungian theory is there in my practice? 5. The animating body:
Psychoid substance as a mutual experience of psychosomatic disorder 6.
Mind-body intimacies and pains 7. A Spinozan lens onto the confusions of
borderline relations 8. A Jungian inheritance of lack and loss: Reflections
on my Jungian ancestry 9. The active use of the analyst's bodymind: as it
is informed by psychic disturbances 10. Symbolising and not-symbolising 11.
Romantic catastrophes and other vital realities 12. Embodied
countertransference and recycling the mad matter of symbolic equivalence
13. Unconscious structures and defences 14. On psychosis 15. Herder's
force: pluralism, expressivism, mind-body relations and empathy 16.
Psychoid relations in the transferential/countertransferential field of
personality disorders 17. Towards a psychoanalytic Spinoza: Reflections on
his philosophy and the psychotherapeutic mind 18. Why (and how) psychoid
relations matter 19. The matter of an oddly embodied mind: My spiritual
travels with a faithful but savage 'pet dog' 20. Last jottings Bibliography
of works by Giles Clark
transformation: Spiritual puer, instinctual shadow and instinctual spirit
2. A black hole in psyche 3. Animation through the analytical relationship:
The embodiment of self in the transference and countertransference 4. How
much Jungian theory is there in my practice? 5. The animating body:
Psychoid substance as a mutual experience of psychosomatic disorder 6.
Mind-body intimacies and pains 7. A Spinozan lens onto the confusions of
borderline relations 8. A Jungian inheritance of lack and loss: Reflections
on my Jungian ancestry 9. The active use of the analyst's bodymind: as it
is informed by psychic disturbances 10. Symbolising and not-symbolising 11.
Romantic catastrophes and other vital realities 12. Embodied
countertransference and recycling the mad matter of symbolic equivalence
13. Unconscious structures and defences 14. On psychosis 15. Herder's
force: pluralism, expressivism, mind-body relations and empathy 16.
Psychoid relations in the transferential/countertransferential field of
personality disorders 17. Towards a psychoanalytic Spinoza: Reflections on
his philosophy and the psychotherapeutic mind 18. Why (and how) psychoid
relations matter 19. The matter of an oddly embodied mind: My spiritual
travels with a faithful but savage 'pet dog' 20. Last jottings Bibliography
of works by Giles Clark