Jungian Books

Books by, about, and for Jungians

Hallie B. Durchslag
(Author)

ISBN-10: 1138057363
ISBN-13: 9781138057364
Routledge

cite: Durchslag, Hallie B.. (2020). The Collective Unconscious in the Age of Neuroscience. Routledge.

Severe Mental Illness and Jung in the 21st Century

The Collective Unconscious in the Age of Neuroscience brings the connection between C. G. Jung’s theory of a collective unconscious, neuroscience, and personal experiences of severe mental illness to life. Hallie B. Durchslag uses narrative analysis to examine four autobiographical accounts of mental illness, including her own, and illuminate the interplay between psychic material and human physiology that Jung intuited to exist.

Durchslag’s unique study considers the links between expressions of the collective unconscious, such as myth, fairy tales, folk tales, and ‘big dreams’, and the experiences of those diagnosed with severe mental illnesses, such as schizophrenia and bipolar I disorder. The author’s personal narrative account of a psychotic episode is at its heart, bringing both an intimate foundation and exceptional insight to the book. With reference to neuroscientific and genetic research throughout, The Collective Unconscious in the Age of Neuroscience highlights gaps in depth psychological notions of etiology and treatment, highlights patterns of collective material in the qualitative experience of these genetic and biological disorders, and explores how the efficacy of pharmacological treatment sheds light on Jung’s theoretical model.

The Collective Unconscious in the Age of Neuroscience will be essential reading for academics and students of Jungian and post-Jungian studies, consciousness, neuroscience and mental health. It will also provide unique insight for analytical psychologists interested in severe mental illness and the collective unconscious.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1

Introduction

Opening the Door

Defining Severe Mental Illness

Jung and Severe Mental Illness

The collective unconscious.

Archetypes.

The challenge of inconsistencies.

Research: Background and Methodology

Initial research questions.

Narrative analysis.

Impressions and extrapolations.

Structure the Book

Moving Forward

References

Notes

 

Chapter 2

Methodology

Methodological Choices

Methodology and Procedures

Method as path.

Narrative analysis.

Narrative analysis and the hermeneutic tradition.

Data Collection and the Path into the Work

Initial review of the literature.

Personal narrative.

Other autobiographical accounts and the addition of personal field text.

Second review of the literature.

Data Analysis

Researcher Reflexivity

Bias.

The wounded researcher.

Ego defeat.

The Embrace of Qualitative Research in the Natural Sciences

Ethical Considerations

A Hermeneutic Homage

References

 

Chapter 3

The Importance of Diagnostic Distinctions

Overview

Scientific Advances

Divergent paths of research.

Medical model.

Depth psychology.

The end of Jung’s legacy.

Diagnostic Guides

Jaspers.

DSM.

Recent trends: RDoC and PDM.

Framing the Dilemma: Personal Onset

Etiology

Depth psychology.

An example of complementarity.

A Move into Collective Material

Moving Forward

References

Notes

 

Chapter 4

Thematic Alignment in Psychosis

Stripping Down Terminology

A brief mention on Jung’s position in the field.

Anton Boisen.

Perry.

The hero.

Supra-Individual Constellation

The theory of actuality.

Other reflections.

Eschatological content.

References

Notes

 

Chapter 5

The Personal Narrative of Psychosis

The Naturally Occurring Variable

Temporality

Thematic Analysis

Synopsis

Thematic Analysis using Perry’s Categories.

Cosmic conflict, national reform, and new society.

Initiation to qualify for leadership.

Apotheosis, national reform, and new society.

Death.

Aftermath

The Challenge Moving Forward

References

Notes

 

Chapter 6

The Brain and Pharmaceutical Actions

The Difficult Dilemma of the Brain

The Brain: Action over System

Physiological focus.

Structure.

Pathways and Communication

Overview.

Dopamine.

Serotonin.

Norepinephrine.

Glutamate.

Y-aminobutyric acid.

Monoamine neurotransmitter system.

Example: Dopamine pathways.

Therapeutic Targets in Antipsychotic Medications

Pharmacological Action of Mood Stabilizers

Electrical stimulation.

Mood Stabilizers: Lithium and anticonvulsants.

Moving Forward

References

Notes

 

Chapter 7

Radiating Outward and the Collective Unconscious

Continuing the Hermeneutic Circle

Brain as Transformer Station

Consideration of energy.

Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT).

Lamictal.

Time

The objective psyche.

Eranos 1951.

Psychoid.

The Non-synchronicity Synchronicity: Foreknowledge

Jung’s visions of World War I.

My own delusions.

A Return to the Intrapsychic Dilemma

The psychodynamic argument.

A return to the collective.

Subjective mud.

References

Notes

 

Chapter 8

From the Transpersonal to the Suprapersonal: Individuation and the Unavoidable Dilemma

The Problem of Spirit

The Suprapersonal

Naming.

Narrative.

Abaissement du Niveau Mental

A spectrum of connection.

Medication and 2003.

Individuation.

Medication and 2010.

Flying without a safety net.

A Different Challenge

References

 

Chapter 9

Reeling in the Net and Readying it to be Recast

Review

Psyche, Psychoid, and Science.

Readying the Net

Synchronicity and the implicit connection to individuation.

Empirical contributions.

Clinical challenges.

References

Translate »