
Dreaming The Myth Onwards shows how a revised appreciation of myth can enrich our daily lives, our psychological awareness, and our human relationships. Lucy Huskinson and her contributors explore the interplay between myth, and Jungian thought and practice, demonstrating the philosophical and psychological principles that underlie our experience of psyche and world.
Contributors from multi-disciplinary backgrounds throughout the world come together to assess the contemporary relevance of myth, in terms of its utility, its effectual position within Jungian theory and practice, and as a general approach for making sense of life. As well as examining the more conscious facets of myth, this volume discusses the unconscious psychodynamic "processes of myth", including active imagination, transference, and countertransference, to illustrate just how these mythic phenomena give meaning to Jungian theory and therapeutic experience.
This rigorous and scholarly analysis showcases fresh readings of central Jungian concepts, updated in accordance with shifts in the cultural and epistemological concerns of contemporary Western consciousness. Dreaming The Myth Onwards will be essential reading for practicing analysts and academics in the field of the arts and social sciences.
"Dreaming the Myth Onwards is a timely and thoughtful collection of essays by a distinguished group of Jungian scholars and analysts. The articles stimulate, provoke, and challenge us to review our cliches about the relation of myth to modernity - a most useful exercise indeed, and terribly relevant to where we are headed in the 21st century"
-- Murray Stein, Ph.D., author of Jung's Map of the Soul
"This book will come as a revelation to some readers and as a relief to others. As a most remarkable and astonishing array of perspectives and differing styles of thinking, all offered in the name of C. G. Jung, it demonstrates that a Jungian psychological perspective is neither monolithic nor single-mindedly ideological. The book is about much more than Jungian mythological perspectives. It is also about image, imagination, psychological narrative, and the theory and practice of Jungian analysis. The book’s title—Dreaming the Myth Onwards—has a double meaning. As one would guess, it refers to theorizing mythologies in many ways, all in a Jungian context. But it also refers to theorizing Jungian psychology differently, dreaming the Jung-myth onwards. Far from resulting in confusion and perspectival chaos, this makes for a kaleidoscopic richness of Jungiana!!"
- - David L. Miller, Ph.D. Watson-Ledden Professor, Emeritus, Syracuse University, New York, USA, Core Faculty Member, Retired, Pacifica Graduate Institute, California, USA
"While reading Dreaming the Myth Onwards with great interest, the following sentence in one of Jung's letters came to mind: 'The systematic elaboration of my ideas which were often just thrown out, is a task for those who come after me' (Letter to Jolande Jacobi, 24th September 1948). To be sure, the contributors to this book take such a task very seriously, but they achieve more than this. Inspired by Jung's ideas, they "dream" and also "think" them onwards, and put forward creative ideas about the interpretation of myth and modernity, together with some new readings of Jung's most original theories".
- - Mario Jacoby, Ph.D., author of Individuation and Narcissism: The Psychology of Self in Jung and Kohut
Introduction
1. Lucy Huskinson: Ordinarily Mythical.
Part I: Directing Onwards
2. Nihan Kaya: Compelled to Create: The Courage to Go Beyond.
Part II: Changing Faces of Myth
3. Vincenzo Sanguineti: Exploring the Mythical Realities of Psyche.
4. Ann Shearer: The Myth of Themis and Jung’s Concept of the Self.
5. David Tacey: Imagining Transcendence at the End of Modernity.
6. Susan Rowland: Jung as a Writer of Myth, Discourse and the Healing of Modernity.
7.
Michael Vannoy Adams: Does Myth (Still) Have a Function in Jungian Studies? Modernity, Myth, Metaphor, and Psycho-Mythology.
8.
Robert Segal: Bringing Myth Back to the World: The Future of Myth in Jungian Psychology.
Part III: Myths at Play
9. Leon Schlamm: Active Imagination in Answer to Job.
10.
Joy Schaverien: Active Imagination and Countertransference Enchantment: Space and Time within the Analytic Frame.
11.
Konoyu Nakamura: The Image Emerging: The Therapist’s Vision at a Crucial Point of Therapy.
Part IV: Psychic Revisions: Towards a New Mythology
12. Phil Goss, Envisaging Animus: An Angry Face in the Consulting Room.
13.
Frances Gray, Plato’s Echo: A Feminist Re-Figuring of the Anima.
14.
Shiho Main, Re-imagining the Child: Challenging Social Constructionist Views of Childhood.
15.
Birgit Heuer, Discourse of Illness of Discourse of Health: Towards a Paradigm-Shift in Post-Jungian Theory.
16.
Honor Griffith, Evoking the Embodied Image: Jung in the Age of the Brain.
ISBN: 978-0-415-43838-4 (Paperback); ISBN: 978-0-415-43837-7 (Hardback)