Date
Mar 01 2022
Expired!
Time
UTC
8:15 pm - 10:00 pm

Local Time

  • Timezone: America/New_York
  • Date: Mar 01 2022
  • Time: 3:15 pm - 5:00 pm
Cost
€15.00

Speaker

  • Hannah Hennebert
    Independent Scholar

    Dr. Hannah Hennebert, Ph.D., is a Brazilian-American independent scholar and a former professor of English and Psychology at the Federal Institute of Rondonia, Brazil. She holds a Ph. D. in Psychology with concentration in Jungian Studies from Saybrook University, a M.A. in Counseling from Eastern Mennonite University, and a B.A. in Language Arts from the Federal University of Rondonia. Dr. Hennebert has presented at various conferences in the U.S., South America, and Europe. She has presented papers about dream analysis and the meaning of archetypes and the collective unconscious in the treatment of trauma during conferences in Argentina and Spain. Dr. Hennebert has international experience working with unprivileged population. She is a motivational speaker for over a decade, and developed an approach, CASA (Curiosidad, Apoyo, Simpatia, y Asistencia), to facilitate counseling sessions with the Latino/Latina population in Virginia. Dr. Hennebert is passionate about working with children and teenagers with Autism Spectrum Disorder using Jungian approach and expressive arts to emotional regulation. Her integrative therapeutic approach includes neuroscience and depth psychology in addition to mindfulness-based techniques. During her free time, Hannah enjoys going for a walk in the nearby forest, dancing, drawing mandalas, and drumming Brazilian rhythms.

Location
Online-Zoom

Organiser
Association of Jungian Analysts
Association of Jungian Analysts
Phone +44 20 7794 8711
Email office@jungiananalysts.org.uk
Website https://jungian.directory/iaap-organisations/association-of-jungian-analysts/

Updated 07 Sept. One event. "monthly meeting". No mailing list.

Decolonizing C. G. Jung archetypal inter-subjectivity in Amazonian myth

This presentation will explore a Kaxinawá myth under the umbrella of the archetypal inter-subjectivity theory to present a decolonizing option to Jungian studies. Myths for C. G. Jung were a leading force directing one’s life. Based on Jung’s studies, and the speaker’s personal background as an Amazonian woman, we will explore a Kaxinawá myth under the umbrella of the archetypal inter-subjectivity theory. The exploration of the Kaxinawá myth will work towards opening analytical psychology to an indigenous worldview and participate in an effort to “decolonize” Jung — examining and critiquing the unconscious and potentially-destructive cultural assumptions in Jung’s own work and discovering the similarities between two limited worldviews that illuminate the similarities of humanity in all places and times.

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