In Person + Zoom: Archetype of the Machine
Zoom Only: Time and Trauma in Analytical Psychology and Psychotherapy: The Wisdom of Andean Shamanism
Zoom Only: Carl Jung & the Jewish Mystical Tradition
Book Event: Nicole Bauer, author of Resilience and Resistance Through Contemplative Practice
In Person + Zoom: Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Skies
In Person + Zoom: Archetype of the Machine
Zoom Only: Time and Trauma in Analytical Psychology and Psychotherapy: The Wisdom of Andean Shamanism
Zoom Only: Carl Jung & the Jewish Mystical Tradition
Book Event: Nicole Bauer, author of Resilience and Resistance Through Contemplative Practice
In Person + Zoom: Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Skies
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A Book Launch – The Spectre of the Other in Jungian Psychoanalysis: Political, Psychological, and Sociological Perspectives
January 27 @ 2:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Prepaid Cost: FreeEvent Navigation
WE ARE FULLY BOOKED FOR IN-PERSON ATTENDANCE, BUT YOU CAN STILL ATTEND VIA ZOOM!
The Spectre of the Other in Jungian Psychoanalysis: Political, Psychological, and Sociological Perspectives – Marybeth Carter and Stephen Farah, Co-Editors
Join us at the Jung Institute of Los Angeles on Saturday, January 27, 2024, for a book launch of Spectre of the Other in Jungian Psychoanalysis: Political, Psychological, and Sociological Perspectives by co-editors Marybeth Carter and Stephen Farah. Books will be available for purchase at the Institute library.
Program is from 2-5 p.m. Pacific – Doors/Zoom opens at 1:30 p.m. Pacific
Endorsement
This bold volume gives flesh and blood specificity to the notion of the Other, a term that can easily feel like an all-purpose nostrum when applied indiscriminately. The insightful contributors to this finely differentiated book enable us to explore the ‘Other’ as it appears in the creative arts, sociology, psychology, and even the ultimate Other, the anus. —Thomas Singer, editor of the award-winning Cultural Complexes and The Soul of America
Presentations/Speakers
Stephen Farah, Introduction: What is an ‘Other’ from a Jungian Psychological Perspective?
All too often, the experience of otherness, experienced by those who are forced to carry it, fuels negativity, self-harm, or even violence. Paradoxically, the encounter with otherness, especially when experienced in the emergence of consciousness, is a fundamentally positive possibility as well as a goal of individuation. In this introduction, Farah speaks to the concept of the ‘other’ as understood in the philosophical thought of Lacan, Heraclitus, and Hegel, as articulated by Papadopoulos in the Foreword of the book.
Marybeth Carter, Satan’s Mouth or Font of Magic: What is it about the Anus?
Carter explores the significance of the alimentary Uroboros. She advocates its significance for the psychological expression of coniunctio to occur, exemplifying the prospective nature of the psyche rather than merely repression. She illustrates this position through images and patients’ dreams.
Douglas Thomas, My Kinky Shadow: The Poetics of the Sadomasochistic Other
A range of sexual behaviors, activities, and relationships are now commonly known as BDSM (bondage and discipline, domination and submission, sadism, and masochism) or kink. Thomas proposes that Jung’s concept of the syzygy provides a framework to understand the value BDSM finds in the creation of a conscious ‘other.’ He advocates that this creative meaning-making aspect of BDSM and kink constitutes a form of poetics offering new possibilities for integrating countercultural aspects of the psyche.
John Beebe, On Being an Other
Beebe draws upon seminal periods in his life as a Jungian psychoanalyst in which taking up ‘Otherness’ played a role in developing his analytic identity. Each of these stories depends on the author’s willingness to accept the role of ‘Other’ within an intersubjective field and, paradoxically, foster objectivity by bringing in his standpoint.
Stephani Stephens, The Spectre and its Movement: The Dynamic of Intra- and Transgenerational Influence
Stephens explores the notion that a spectre leaves footprints, spaces, or perhaps a mark, as Jung calls it, and influences and interferes with the destiny of succeeding generations, which the author maintains, raises the crucial question of whether transgenerational influence constitutes haunting.
Additional Endorsements
The Spectre of the Other could not be timelier nor more important. This superb collection of new research dissects Jung’s Eurocentrism, diagnoses his racism, and repositions his psychoanalysis as uniquely poised to bring transdisciplinary illumination to the Other in a twenty-first century of multiple crises. Drawing on indigenous, artistic, historical, and psychological perspectives, The Spectre of the Other is an international volume extending clinical research into the collective. It thereby reinvigorates Jungian studies by enlarging the scope of the field. No serious scholar of psychology and Othering can afford to miss it.
–Susan Rowland, author of Jungian Arts-based Research and the Nuclear Enchantment of New Mexico
This collection will stand the test of time, not only because of its vision and intersectional spirit but because it captures where our field has been and points to where it is going – indeed, where it needs to go.
—Kevin Lu, Head of Department, Department of Psychosocial and Psychoanalytic Studies, University of Essex
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.