This innovative volume on the mourning process, burial rites and intimations of immortality offers diverse Jungian, cross cultural, interdisciplinary, depth psychological perspectives, written predominantly by graduates and candidates of the CG Jung Institute Zürich.
This innovative volume on the mourning process, burial rites and intimations of immortality offers diverse Jungian, cross cultural, interdisciplinary, depth psychological perspectives, written predominantly by graduates and candidates of the CG Jung Institute Zürich.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Elizabeth Brodersen, PhD, is an accredited Jungian Training Analyst and Supervisor at the CGJI Zürich and currently a member of the Institute's Research Commission. Elizabeth received her doctorate in psycho-social psychoanalytic studies at the University of Essex, UK, and works as a Jungian analyst in a private practice in Germany and Switzerland.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Part 1: Cross cultural, liminal relations with the dead 1. Day of the dead in Los Angeles as numinosum 2. A comparative, ethnographic study of the journey to the land of the dead 3. Crossing the bridge to uncertainty, a life with death and the dead Part 2: Pandemics and access to immortality 4. Splintered Afterlives: Aids, death and beyond 5. C.G. Jung, Gloria Anzaldua and social activisim's possibility Part 3: Burial rituals: crossing over 6. Bardo, Noh Play and zeitgerist in Japan 7. Pandemic, the zenith of an archetypal disconnection Part 4: Grief, mourning and loss: clinical dimensions 8. The problem of death and meaning for depth psychology 9. When the mourning process needs psychiatric support Part 5: Eros, death and the unconscious 10. Deceased loved ones in dreams 11. Immortaliy, mourning, and ritual Part 6: Towards an archetypal ontology of death 12. The seduction of immortality: Jung, Heidegger, and Hegel on death 13. Destiny and personal myth: archetypal constellations of the soul Part 7: Psycho-social dimensions of grief and the mourning process 14. Opening the eyes to invisible people 15. The Katako syndrome: Japan's problem with youth suicide
Introduction Part 1: Cross cultural, liminal relations with the dead 1. Day of the dead in Los Angeles as numinosum 2. A comparative, ethnographic study of the journey to the land of the dead 3. Crossing the bridge to uncertainty, a life with death and the dead Part 2: Pandemics and access to immortality 4. Splintered Afterlives: Aids, death and beyond 5. C.G. Jung, Gloria Anzaldua and social activisim's possibility Part 3: Burial rituals: crossing over 6. Bardo, Noh Play and zeitgerist in Japan 7. Pandemic, the zenith of an archetypal disconnection Part 4: Grief, mourning and loss: clinical dimensions 8. The problem of death and meaning for depth psychology 9. When the mourning process needs psychiatric support Part 5: Eros, death and the unconscious 10. Deceased loved ones in dreams 11. Immortaliy, mourning, and ritual Part 6: Towards an archetypal ontology of death 12. The seduction of immortality: Jung, Heidegger, and Hegel on death 13. Destiny and personal myth: archetypal constellations of the soul Part 7: Psycho-social dimensions of grief and the mourning process 14. Opening the eyes to invisible people 15. The Katako syndrome: Japan's problem with youth suicide
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