Date

Mar 10 2023
Expired!

Time

UTC-6
7:00 pm - 7:00 pm

Local Time

  • Timezone: America/New_York
  • Date: Mar 10 2023
  • Time: 8:00 pm - 8:00 pm

Cost

$110.00

Speaker

Location

Santa Fe Friends Meeting Hall
505 Camino De Los Marquez, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505, United States

Organiser

The New Mexico Society of Jungian Analysts
The New Mexico Society of Jungian Analysts
Website
https://jungian.directory/iaap-organisations/nmsja/

Straying from the Path: Fairy Tales, Queer Theory and Queer Energy as Models of an Analytic Attitude

Friday Lecture | 7pm-9pm

Those who cannot perform normative cultural narratives often find their voices silenced because they are not mirrored by the culture in which they find themselves. Fairy tales fail to mirror our human experience in many ways. And yet, these stories offer archetypal images that may provide a path towards a new mirror, if one is willing to stray from the offered path. To Queer an experience is to resist defining it.

Beginning with the legacy of the Grimm brother’s collections, the Friday evening lecture will focus on a willingness to transgress traditional views in service to psychological and spiritual development, which involves conscious suffering. This authentic capacity is fragile and currently threatened by our society’s Zeitgeist—that of polarization, cancel culture, and overt demonstrations of violence towards anyone who cannot perform the hegemonic narrative being imposed.

Saturday Workshop | 9am-1.30pm

“Jouissance Determines the Necessary Path,” will further explore how to apply Queer Theory in clinical work through amplification and deconstructive narrative work. Jouissance is a French term that connects us with the primal drive to TRANSGRESS in service to authentic individuation. To be in connection with one’s jouissance means embracing one’s personal ‘fate’ and cooperating with what connects one to Source. On Saturday, we will explore three literary fairy tales:  Oscar Wilde’s The Happy Prince (1888), Hans Christian Andersen’s The Steadfast Tin Soldier (1838), and Angela Carter’s The Lady of the House of Love (1979) and, we will be introduced to a Queer reverie of the films of Alfred Hitchcock. Through the above explorations we will attempt to make Queer connections to clinical work and to analytic attitude.

  • Brief Overview:

    The Lecture and Workshop can be attended individually or as a unit

The event is finished.

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