Date
- Jan 01 1970
Time
Eastern Time- 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Local Time
- Timezone: America/New_York
- Date: Apr 27 2026
- Time: 7:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Cost
- $75.00
Speaker
- Hannah HennebertIndependent 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.
Organiser

The Jung Society of Washington
Phone
202-237-8109Website
https://jungian.directory/related_organisation/jung-society-of-washington/Last updated 10 Sept 2021. All available events added (Feb 2022)
ARCHETYPAL INTERSUBJECTIVITY IN THE AMAZONIAN MYTHOLOGY OF THE KAXINAWÁ: A Call to Ecological Awareness in Human Relationships, a workshop with Hannah Hennebert
The purpose of this workshop is to introduce the Amazonian mythology of the Kaxinawá (self-named as Huni Kuin meaning “true people”) under the umbrella of archetypal intersubjectivity – a concept that I developed during my doctoral studies. Within an anthropocentric perspective, only human beings have subjectivity. What is being proposed within the concept of archetypal intersubjectivity is the call to awareness that matter is not something inert, but, as an integral part of the formation of life on our planet, it also has a history which begins with the innumerable interactions with other elements that are part of its formation. Therefore, because it is interactive, it has alterity, subjectivity, and archetypal character. Thus archetypal intersubjectivity is a theory that seeks to comprehend the psychological phenomena through the archetypal interaction between beings in a given environment. The archetypal intersubjectivity theory presupposes that the relationship individuals develop with one another and with the environment directly influence the internal experience of being aware. It also contributes to the development of one’s personality and complexes that will surge as a result of the quality of those interactions.