Jungian Psychology in the East and West
Cross-Cultural Perspectives from Japan
Herausgeber: Nakamura, Konoyu; Carta, Stefano
Jungian Psychology in the East and West
Cross-Cultural Perspectives from Japan
Herausgeber: Nakamura, Konoyu; Carta, Stefano
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This edited collection explores the connections and differences between eastern and western approaches to Jungian psychology. Readers will discover through this volume, how much Western Jungians are inspired by Eastern traditions and how the product of a Western author has been widely accepted and developed by Japanese scholars and clinicians.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Avi Goren-BarAn Introduction to Jungian Coaching41,99 €
- Harriet Friedman / RIE ROGERS MITCHELL (eds.)Supervision of Sandplay Therapy56,99 €
- Hallie B DurchslagThe Collective Unconscious in the Age of Neuroscience48,99 €
- Renee M WintersThe Hoarding Impulse76,99 €
- Patricia R FrischWhole Therapist, Whole Patient57,99 €
- James HillmanWe've Had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy--And the World's Getting Worse18,99 €
- Keila ShaheenThe Shadow Work Journal17,99 €
-
-
-
This edited collection explores the connections and differences between eastern and western approaches to Jungian psychology. Readers will discover through this volume, how much Western Jungians are inspired by Eastern traditions and how the product of a Western author has been widely accepted and developed by Japanese scholars and clinicians.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 198
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Januar 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 308g
- ISBN-13: 9780367766887
- ISBN-10: 0367766884
- Artikelnr.: 69894808
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 198
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Januar 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 308g
- ISBN-13: 9780367766887
- ISBN-10: 0367766884
- Artikelnr.: 69894808
Konoyu Nakamura is Professor of Clinical Psychology at Otemon Gakuin University in Osaka, Japan. She is involved in clinical work at her private practice in Kyoto as a Jungian-oriented psychotherapist. She has contributed chapters to several books, including Analytical Psychology in a Changing World: The Search for Self, Identity and Community (2015) and Jungian Perspective on Rebirth and Renewal Phoenix Rising (2017). She was responsible for translating Susan Rowland's Jung: A Feminist Revision into Japanese (2021). She is a member of the International Association for Jungian Studies and is a member of the Executive of Committee of the International Association for Jungian Studies for the 2015-2020 term and she was also Co-Chair of the 2019 IAJS Regional Conference, Osaka, Japan, at Otemon Gakuin University. Stefano Carta is a psychologist and a Jungian analyst graduate at the C.G. Jung Institute in Zurich. He is Professor of Dynamic and Clinical Psychology at the University of Cagliari, Italy, and Honorary Professor at the Department of Psychoanalytic Studies at the University of Essex, UK. He is a member of the International Association of Analytical Psychology, and of the Associazione Italiana di Psicologia Analitica (AIPA), of which he was the President for the 2002-2006 term. He has been the representative for Italy at the United Nations' International Union of Psychological Sciences. He has also been a consultant for UNESCO, for which he has edited a three-volume entry on psychology for the Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems. He is the the director of the oldest Jungian Journal in Italy, The Rivista di Psicologia Analitica, and has been the deputy Europe editor of the Journal of Analytical Psychology.
Part 1: East and West 1. How Can We Survive in This Globalized Age?
Exploring ego consciousness in the Western and the Japanese psyches 2. The
Ego and Self in East-West Psychology 3. Cultural Reflection in Eastern and
Western Tales of the Mirror 4. East Meets West in World War II:
Implications for Japan's Maternal Culture Part 2: Images 5. Narcissism and
Difference: Narcissism of Minor Differences Revisited 6. Encountering the
other world in Japanese Manga: from Hyakki-yagyo-zu to Pocket Monsters 7.
Ancient Chinese Hieroglyph: Archetype of Transformation of Jungian
Psychology and Its Clinical Implication 8. Conversion of Saint Francis of
Assisi: Guidance by Dreams and Encounter with Father Part 3: Clinical
Issues 9. Intimate relationships between women and men: psychosocial and
post-Jungian perspectives 10. Rising Compassion. Revisiting 'clinical
empathy' from F. Schleiermacher's translational viewpoint 11. Ensou and
Tree view therapy: Zen based psychotherapy from Hisamatsu and Kato theory
12. Significance of drawings without a tree in response to the Baum test by
schizophrenic patients: Interpreting drawings by schizophrenic patients
from a Jungian perspective Part 4: Identity and Individuation 13. The House
Imago and the Creation of Order 14. From Dragons to Leaders: Latvian and
Japanese Psyches, and an Organic Consciousness 15. Emptiness and Diversity
-psychological inner movement in western and eastern culture- 16.
Un-written in Stone: Re-Imagining Individuation and the Objective Psyche
with Japanese and American Landscapes 17. More Ancient Layers of the
Japanese Psyche as Seen from the Tales and Dreams of the Ainu 18. Makoto
Tsumori's philosophy of care and education in relation to Jungian
psychology.
Exploring ego consciousness in the Western and the Japanese psyches 2. The
Ego and Self in East-West Psychology 3. Cultural Reflection in Eastern and
Western Tales of the Mirror 4. East Meets West in World War II:
Implications for Japan's Maternal Culture Part 2: Images 5. Narcissism and
Difference: Narcissism of Minor Differences Revisited 6. Encountering the
other world in Japanese Manga: from Hyakki-yagyo-zu to Pocket Monsters 7.
Ancient Chinese Hieroglyph: Archetype of Transformation of Jungian
Psychology and Its Clinical Implication 8. Conversion of Saint Francis of
Assisi: Guidance by Dreams and Encounter with Father Part 3: Clinical
Issues 9. Intimate relationships between women and men: psychosocial and
post-Jungian perspectives 10. Rising Compassion. Revisiting 'clinical
empathy' from F. Schleiermacher's translational viewpoint 11. Ensou and
Tree view therapy: Zen based psychotherapy from Hisamatsu and Kato theory
12. Significance of drawings without a tree in response to the Baum test by
schizophrenic patients: Interpreting drawings by schizophrenic patients
from a Jungian perspective Part 4: Identity and Individuation 13. The House
Imago and the Creation of Order 14. From Dragons to Leaders: Latvian and
Japanese Psyches, and an Organic Consciousness 15. Emptiness and Diversity
-psychological inner movement in western and eastern culture- 16.
Un-written in Stone: Re-Imagining Individuation and the Objective Psyche
with Japanese and American Landscapes 17. More Ancient Layers of the
Japanese Psyche as Seen from the Tales and Dreams of the Ainu 18. Makoto
Tsumori's philosophy of care and education in relation to Jungian
psychology.
Part 1: East and West 1. How Can We Survive in This Globalized Age?
Exploring ego consciousness in the Western and the Japanese psyches 2. The
Ego and Self in East-West Psychology 3. Cultural Reflection in Eastern and
Western Tales of the Mirror 4. East Meets West in World War II:
Implications for Japan's Maternal Culture Part 2: Images 5. Narcissism and
Difference: Narcissism of Minor Differences Revisited 6. Encountering the
other world in Japanese Manga: from Hyakki-yagyo-zu to Pocket Monsters 7.
Ancient Chinese Hieroglyph: Archetype of Transformation of Jungian
Psychology and Its Clinical Implication 8. Conversion of Saint Francis of
Assisi: Guidance by Dreams and Encounter with Father Part 3: Clinical
Issues 9. Intimate relationships between women and men: psychosocial and
post-Jungian perspectives 10. Rising Compassion. Revisiting 'clinical
empathy' from F. Schleiermacher's translational viewpoint 11. Ensou and
Tree view therapy: Zen based psychotherapy from Hisamatsu and Kato theory
12. Significance of drawings without a tree in response to the Baum test by
schizophrenic patients: Interpreting drawings by schizophrenic patients
from a Jungian perspective Part 4: Identity and Individuation 13. The House
Imago and the Creation of Order 14. From Dragons to Leaders: Latvian and
Japanese Psyches, and an Organic Consciousness 15. Emptiness and Diversity
-psychological inner movement in western and eastern culture- 16.
Un-written in Stone: Re-Imagining Individuation and the Objective Psyche
with Japanese and American Landscapes 17. More Ancient Layers of the
Japanese Psyche as Seen from the Tales and Dreams of the Ainu 18. Makoto
Tsumori's philosophy of care and education in relation to Jungian
psychology.
Exploring ego consciousness in the Western and the Japanese psyches 2. The
Ego and Self in East-West Psychology 3. Cultural Reflection in Eastern and
Western Tales of the Mirror 4. East Meets West in World War II:
Implications for Japan's Maternal Culture Part 2: Images 5. Narcissism and
Difference: Narcissism of Minor Differences Revisited 6. Encountering the
other world in Japanese Manga: from Hyakki-yagyo-zu to Pocket Monsters 7.
Ancient Chinese Hieroglyph: Archetype of Transformation of Jungian
Psychology and Its Clinical Implication 8. Conversion of Saint Francis of
Assisi: Guidance by Dreams and Encounter with Father Part 3: Clinical
Issues 9. Intimate relationships between women and men: psychosocial and
post-Jungian perspectives 10. Rising Compassion. Revisiting 'clinical
empathy' from F. Schleiermacher's translational viewpoint 11. Ensou and
Tree view therapy: Zen based psychotherapy from Hisamatsu and Kato theory
12. Significance of drawings without a tree in response to the Baum test by
schizophrenic patients: Interpreting drawings by schizophrenic patients
from a Jungian perspective Part 4: Identity and Individuation 13. The House
Imago and the Creation of Order 14. From Dragons to Leaders: Latvian and
Japanese Psyches, and an Organic Consciousness 15. Emptiness and Diversity
-psychological inner movement in western and eastern culture- 16.
Un-written in Stone: Re-Imagining Individuation and the Objective Psyche
with Japanese and American Landscapes 17. More Ancient Layers of the
Japanese Psyche as Seen from the Tales and Dreams of the Ainu 18. Makoto
Tsumori's philosophy of care and education in relation to Jungian
psychology.