This book presents an analysis of the social aspects of Carl Gustav Jung's thought and its followers, the interpretation of the phenomena of contemporary social life (social imagery) from the perspective of the main categories of this thought (archetype, unconscious, collectivity, mass society, mass man). It also contains an attempt of their application for understanding contemporary social and political phenomena (e.g. Brazilian sebastianism, Balkan conflicts, virtual-imagery sphere of communication, figures of imagery in popular culture, and others). The authors examine the relationship between Jung’s and Jungians' (E. Neumann, J. Hillman, J. L. Henderson) conceptions and many accompanying them (e.g. Frankfurt school, Bachelard’s philosophy, American cultural psychoanalysis) and the background of contemporary social psychology, sociology, and cultural anthropology.
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This volume explores the theoretical area of C. G. Jung's social thought (social imagery) and its contemporary interpretations in the perspective of the political conflicts phenomena, stereotypes, discrimination, consumerism, popular culture, technopolis and dysfunctions in the sense of security.
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List of Figures Introduction: Archetypes and Imagination  Ilona Blocian, Robert Segal, and Andrew Kuzmicki Part 1: Collective Structures of the Unconscious 1 What Is Real?  John Beebe 2 Jung and Social Thought  Ilona Blocian 3 Interpretation Dilemmas Relating to Carl Gustav Jung's Concept in the Context of the Sociological-Anthropological Tradition  Ewa Kwiatkowska Part 2: Social Imaginarium 4 The Lost Art of Personalization  Vicky Jo Varner 5 The Wall: Object, Image, and Processes in the Individual and Collective Psyche  Monica Luci 6 An Unconscious Source of Images: about how Bachelard Read Jung  Kamila Morawska 7 In the Quest for Temenos: Metaphors for the Origins of Serbian Cultural Complexes  Bojana Stamenkovic Rudic 8 Therapy of Shadow in Film and Literature Introductory Remarks  Maria Kostyszak 9 Archetypal Feminine in Kaxinawá's Stories: A Decolonizing Option to Jungian Approach  Hannah Hennebert 10 The Hero as a Dominant Mythical Motif in Western Culture and Its Relevance Nowadays: The Postulates of Jung and his Followers  Patrycja Neumann 11 What Only They Could See: A Comparative Analysis of Hilma af Klint's Swan Paintings and C. G. Jung's Mandala Sketches  Kathrin Schaeppi 12 Traces of Psychological Impact Found in the Drawings by Cancer Patients  Norifumi Kishimoto 13 Return to Indigenous Art Forms: Potential for Healing  Josepha Bayes-King 14 Erich Neumann's Great Mother, André Green's Dead Mother, and Ecopsychology  Lidar Shany 15 Wotan and Cocks: Reframing Jungian Sociology for the Early 21st Century  Johann Graaff Part 3: Psychological Significance in Social Processes 16 Thinking of a Social Hierarchy as an Instinctual and Archetypal Phenomenon  Andrew Kuzmicki 17 Cultural Complex, Death Anxiety, and Individuation During the Times of Populism: A Dialogue between Jungian Psychology and Social Psychology  Helge Michael Osterhold 18 Portuguese Sebastianism as an Intersection Field between the Right and Left Political Forces in Brazilian 2018 Presidential Elections  Gustavo Orlandeli Marques 19 From Compensation to Purpose. A Neo-Jungian Critique of Horkheimer and Marcuse  Stefano Carpani 20 Mania of Contemporary Capitalism-A Polish Perspective  Michaó Wróblewski Index
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Product details

ISBN
9789004468740
Published
2022
Publisher
Brill
Weight
758 gr
Height
235 mm
Width
155 mm
Thickness
29 mm
Age
P, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
380

Biographical note

Professor Robert A. Segal is Sixth Century Chair in Religious Studies at the University of Aberdeen. His main works include The Poimandres as Myth: Scholarly Theory and Gnostic Meaning (Berlin, 1986), Joseph Campbell: An Introduction (New York, 1987), Jung on Mythology (Princeton, 1998), Theorizing about Myth (Amherst, 1999), Myth: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford, 2004/2015), and Myth Analyzed (London/New York, 2021).

Associate Professor Ilona Błocian is Director of the Institute of Philosophy and Director of the Center of Interdisciplinary Research and Philosophy of Culture at the University of Wrocław, Poland. Her main works include The Psychoanalytical Interpretations of Myth. Freud, Jung, Fromm (Warsaw, 2011), The Contemporary Influences of C. G. Jung’s Thought (Leiden, 2018), and Imagination: Art, Science and Social World (Berlin, 2020).

Dr. Andrew Kuzmicki conducts research at the International Association for Jungian Studies and writes for the Polish Online Journal of Analytical Psychology of Carl Gustav Jung. His main works include The Symbolism of the Self (Warsaw, 2008) and The Contemporary Influences of C. G. Jung’s Thought (Leiden, 2018).