Zoom Only: Carl Jung & the Jewish Mystical Tradition
In Person + Zoom: Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Skies
In-Person Only: Embodied Resourcing Through Image Making
In-Person + Zoom: First North American Conference on Infant, Child and Adolescent Jungian Analysis
Zoom Only: Carl Jung & the Jewish Mystical Tradition
In Person + Zoom: Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Skies
In-Person Only: Embodied Resourcing Through Image Making
In-Person + Zoom: First North American Conference on Infant, Child and Adolescent Jungian Analysis
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Zoom Only:
The Passionate Body: HIV/AIDS as Cultural Complex
November 20, 2022 @ 10:00 am - 3:00 pm
Prepaid Cost: $70.00 – $90.00Event Navigation
Program: 10:00 am – 12:00 pm, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm / Lunch break: 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm.
Presented by Paul Attinello, Ph.D.
Viral invasion, infection anxiety, illness, and death returning to the contemporary world–HIV/AIDS has been an intensely charged crisis in sexuality, medical awareness, and our relationship to sickness and death for forty years, and continues to be an ongoing disaster in many parts of the world. I will approach AIDS as a series of dense cultural complexes, all combining ancient roots with modern patterns, some of which have reappeared in the COVID pandemic. The archetypal narrative of the experience of HIV/AIDS as it exists in the ego, in the imagination, in the body, and in politics, links the unapproachable intensity of early death tied to physical passion. The passionate body is a generating focus – the body that desires, that is erotic – which is also the body that wants to live, that battles and demonstrates and engages with contagion, rot, and disintegration.
Learning Objectives
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Describe the mental health impact on those diagnosed with HIV/AIDS.
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Give an example of a cultural complex associated with illness, infection, and sexuality.
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Distinguish between complexes related to HIV/AIDS and those related to COVID.
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Identify transference and countertransference in relation to the fear of death, existential anxieties, and individuation.
Paul Attinello, Ph.D., is a Jungian analyst in private practice who has taught at Newcastle University, the University of Hong Kong, and UCLA. He received his Ph.D. from UCLA and diploma as an analyst from the C. G. Jung Institute in Zürich. He has lived and worked on four continents, been involved in creative and academic events and projects, and is co-founder of the Psychosocial Wednesdays seminar series. He has been a person with HIV since the early 1980s and has worked with HIV groups and programs in several countries. He is published in essay collections, journals, and reference works, including the groundbreaking Queering the Pitch: The New Lesbian & Gay Musicology, writing on contemporary musics, the culture of AIDS, and psychological and philosophical topics.
(Image: ‘Reflections of You’, by Jack Carroll, 1989)
Continuing Education:
Psychologists/LCSWs/MFTs/LPCCs: The C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. The C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
Nurses: The C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles is an accredited provider approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing. Registered Nurses may claim only the actual number of hours spent in the educational activity for credit.