The book focuses on the theory and practice of Jungian analysis, group analysis and the relevance of these psychotherapy to one another. Zinkin makes connections between concepts in the Jungian analysis and the psychoanalytic repertoire, from his other disciplines, including anthropology, social psychology, literary philosophy and physics.
The book focuses on the theory and practice of Jungian analysis, group analysis and the relevance of these psychotherapy to one another. Zinkin makes connections between concepts in the Jungian analysis and the psychoanalytic repertoire, from his other disciplines, including anthropology, social psychology, literary philosophy and physics.
Louis Zinkin was a Training Analytic of the Society of Analytical Psychology and of the Institute of Group Analysis. He was Honorary Consultant Psychotherapist at St George's Hospital, London, and a Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists. He gave numerous papers of Jungian analysis and group analysis and co-edited The Psyche and the Social World Hindle Zinkin is a practicing psychotherapist and analytical psychologist. She is a Full Member of the British Association of Psychotherapists and an Associate Member of the Group Analytic Society (London). Rosemary Gordon is an Honorary Research Fellow, University of Kent, and a Training Analytical Psychology and the British Association of Psychotherapist. Jane Haynes is a Professional Member of the Society of Analytical Psychology and Review Editor for Harvest : Journal for Jungian Studies.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Figures. Acknowledgements. Foreword. Malcolm Pines. Foreword. Rosemary Gordon. Introduction. Psychotherapy and the Jewish Experience. 1. Death in Venice: a Jungian view. 2. Person to person: the search for the human dimension in psychotherapy. 3. The collective and the personal. 4. Paradoxes of the self. 5. The Klein connection in the London School: the search for origins. 6. The hologram as a model for analytical psychology. 7. Correspondence between Louis Zinkin and Michael Fordman. 8. Is Jungian group analysis possible? 9. The grail and the group. 10. The group as container and contained. 11. A gnostic view of the therapy group. 12. The dialogical principle: Jung, Foulkes and Bakhtin. 13. Three models are better than one. 14. Malignant mirroring. 15. Loss of self in envy and jealousy. 16. All's well that ends well ? or is it? Subject Index. Author Index.
List of Figures. Acknowledgements. Foreword. Malcolm Pines. Foreword. Rosemary Gordon. Introduction. Psychotherapy and the Jewish Experience. 1. Death in Venice: a Jungian view. 2. Person to person: the search for the human dimension in psychotherapy. 3. The collective and the personal. 4. Paradoxes of the self. 5. The Klein connection in the London School: the search for origins. 6. The hologram as a model for analytical psychology. 7. Correspondence between Louis Zinkin and Michael Fordman. 8. Is Jungian group analysis possible? 9. The grail and the group. 10. The group as container and contained. 11. A gnostic view of the therapy group. 12. The dialogical principle: Jung, Foulkes and Bakhtin. 13. Three models are better than one. 14. Malignant mirroring. 15. Loss of self in envy and jealousy. 16. All's well that ends well ? or is it? Subject Index. Author Index.
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