Within this fascinating new volume, a group of prominent Jungian writers seek to explore the apparent contradiction between two aspects of Jungian thinking: one that points in the direction of a genuinely radical relational psychology, and another which seems to struggle to engage meaningfully with what we might call the psychosocial dimension.
Jung’s work is centrally concerned with what is often referred to as the problem of opposites, for example, his notions of introversion and extraversion. In biographical terms, this is expressed in the split between Jung’s outward-facing and inward-facing personalities. Because Jung identified himself as an introvert, the question arises as to how this might have shaped his psychology. Recent scholarship has often brought attention to the problematics of Jung’s engagement with collective life and the political. In the spirit of maintaining the kind of dialectical tension that Jung urged, this series of papers seeks to explore one-sidedness in analytical psychology with particular emphasis on how we theorize the immediacy of encounter with others.
This unique collection will be of particular value to scholars and clinicians within the Jungian world, as well as relationally-oriented psychoanalysts with an interest in becoming more conversant in Jung.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. Jung and the Relational: Beyond the Individual
Mark Saban
2. Some Implications of Synchronicity and the Psychoid for Analytical Psychology
Joe Cambray
3. From Projection to Enactment in a Jungian Light
Robin S. Brown
4. Soul in the World: Symbolic Culture as the Medium for Psyche
Warren Colman
5. J. L. Moreno’s theory of tele encounters C. G. Jung’s theory of synchronicity: An Integrative Approach to Group Psychotherapy
Robin McCoy Brooks
6. The Dynamics and Ethic of the Deep Relational Self
Marcus West
7. The Intersubjective Perspective in Jung and Bion: Complementary Views of Unconscious Process, Structure, and Interaction
Mark Winborn