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Date
- Feb 07 2025
- Expired!
Time
UTC-7- 6:30 pm - 8:30 pm
Local Time
- Timezone: America/Los_Angeles
- Date: Feb 07 2025
- Time: 5:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Cost
- $25.00
Speakers
- Stephanie Gierman
- Bette Joram
Location
Organiser

C.G. Jung Society, Seattle
Website
https://jungian.directory/related_organisation/c-g-jung-society-seattle/The purpose of the C.G. Jung Society, Seattle, is to support a sustainable learning community centered on the life and work of Carl Gustav Jung. We promote Jung's analytical psychology, which emphasizes the development of the whole person as the path to self-knowledge, creativity, and well-being. At the Society, we examine the interplay of the conscious and the unconscious through the lens of diverse traditions, including religious, transpersonal, and mythological ones. We organize events such as lectures, workshops, and discussions that offer intellectual, participatory, as well as experiential engagement with Jung's work.Last visited Aug 23/2021 - no events
Fairy Tale Fridays | The Fitcher’s Bird
"Marie Louise von Franz quoted Jung as saying that to be in a situation where there is no way out or to be in a conflict where there is no solution is the classical beginning of the process of individuation. Fairy tales begin this way as well. Once upon a time, a queen is dead, or children are abandoned in the woods, or a miller cannot not feed his family, or the village is plagued by a giant, or a treasure is lost in a deep pool. Once a month, Society members and other lovers of the power of story and the Jungian approach to understanding and developing ourselves, meet for Fairy Tale Fridays. In each story we find shadow, complexes, anima, animus, soul, ego, alchemy, and the numinous, all guiding us on a journey toward selfhood. Intuition tells us that these international stories of struggle and magic, so saturated with collective unconscious symbology, are much older than the written record. Recent research has all but confirmed that these enduring fables have been told around campfires and hearths since the Bronze Age—something Jungians have suspected all along." -(Written by Reid Stell. For full article: tinyurl.com/VeryOldTales)
Learning objectives:
1. Learn to identify the structure of the fairy tale. Begin with the exposition (time and place) and then the dramatis personae, the people involved. Next, name the problem, followed by the peripeteia or the ups and downs of the story. Identify the climax and notice that it is followed by a lysis or sometimes a catastrophe. At the end of the fairy tale something happens to switch us out of the fairy tale world.
2. Begin to amplify the motifs in the fairy tale by looking at comparative material. How can we construct a context? Ex: See how the mouse in this fairy tale behaves differently from other mice. What does this mean?
3. Understand how to begin to interpret the fairy tale, the task of translating the fairy tale into psychological language.
Suggested reading: The Interpretation of Fairy Tales, by Marie Louise von Franz
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Brief Overview:
Once a month, Society members and other lovers of the power of story and the Jungian approach to understanding and developing ourselves, meet for Fairy Tale Fridays. In each story we find shadow, complexes, anima, animus, soul, ego, alchemy, and the numinous, all guiding us on a journey toward selfhood.
The event is finished.
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