To many, Jung and Moreno seem to be on opposite sides in their theories and their practices of psychotherapy. Jung defines self as emerging inwardly in an intrapsychic process of individuation; Moreno defines self as enacted outwardly in psychosocial networks of relationships. Jung and Moreno: Essays on the theatre of human nature shows how Jung and Moreno can be creatively combined to understand better and facilitate therapeutic work. Craig E. Stephenson and contributors write about how and why they put together Jung and Moreno. They describe and discuss psychodrama sessions grounded in the…mehr
To many, Jung and Moreno seem to be on opposite sides in their theories and their practices of psychotherapy. Jung defines self as emerging inwardly in an intrapsychic process of individuation; Moreno defines self as enacted outwardly in psychosocial networks of relationships. Jung and Moreno: Essays on the theatre of human nature shows how Jung and Moreno can be creatively combined to understand better and facilitate therapeutic work. Craig E. Stephenson and contributors write about how and why they put together Jung and Moreno. They describe and discuss psychodrama sessions grounded in the fundamentals of Jung's analytical psychology, as well as dream and fairy tale enactments and individual psychoanalytical sessions in which they employ psychodramatic techniques. The essays retheorize Jungian concepts of transference and complexes in the light of Moreno's insights. They reframe and deepen traditional psychodramatic techniques by securing them within Jung's archetypal context. Jung and Moreno challenges our understanding of healing practices and the integration of spontaneous unconscious processes, bringing these two ground breaking practitioners to meet collaboratively in the theatre of human nature. The contributions are original and insightful arguments by nine important thinkers. This book will be of interest to psychotherapists, analytical psychologists, psychoanalysts, psychodrama practitioners, drama therapists and students.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Craig E. Stephenson is a Jungian analyst and psychodrama practitioner. He is a graduate of the C.G. Jung Institut Zürich, the Institut für Psychodrama auf der Grundlage der Jungschen Psychologie, Zumikon, and the Centre for Psychoanalytic Studies, University of Essex. His books include Possession: Jung's comparative anatomy of the psyche (Routledge, 2009) and Anteros: A forgotten myth (Routledge, 2011). Contributors: Ellynor Barz, Christopher Beach, Doreen Madden Elefthery, Mariolina Graziosi, John Hill, Emilija Kiehl, Barbara Helen Miller, Siri Ness and Wilma Scategni
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements. List of contributors. Stephenson Introduction. Elefthery Theatre or Therapy. Barz Psychodrama Grounded in the Perspective of Analytical Psychology. Beach Jungian Psychodrama. Ness The Drum Time of Psychodrama: Reflections on a Jungian Psychodrama Group. Scategni Jung Moreno and Dream Enactment. Hill Fairy Tale Drama: Enacting Rituals of Play Laughter and Tears. Beach Using Psychodrama in Analysis. Graziosi Psychodrama and the Resolution of Transference and Counter-transference. Miller The Loss and Gaining of Timing: Active Imagination in Performance. Kiehl Encounters with Jung and Moreno on the Road of Bricks and Moss. Index.
Acknowledgements. List of contributors. Stephenson Introduction. Elefthery Theatre or Therapy. Barz Psychodrama Grounded in the Perspective of Analytical Psychology. Beach Jungian Psychodrama. Ness The Drum Time of Psychodrama: Reflections on a Jungian Psychodrama Group. Scategni Jung Moreno and Dream Enactment. Hill Fairy Tale Drama: Enacting Rituals of Play Laughter and Tears. Beach Using Psychodrama in Analysis. Graziosi Psychodrama and the Resolution of Transference and Counter-transference. Miller The Loss and Gaining of Timing: Active Imagination in Performance. Kiehl Encounters with Jung and Moreno on the Road of Bricks and Moss. Index.
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