1st Edition

Jung on Active Imagination

Edited By Joan Chodorow, C.G. Jung Copyright 1997
208 Pages
by Routledge

Jung's discovery of active imagination is one of the most important milestones in his personal and professional life. Prompted by the trauma of his break up with Freud, he developed a method of self healing which later formed the basis of his analytic practice and is now regarded as the origin of non-directive psychotherapy and creative arts therapies. Jungian analyst, Joan Chodorow brings... Read more
Acknowledgements; Introduction; 1 Confrontation with the unconscious; 2 The transcendent function; 3 'The technique of differentiation between the ego and the figures of the unconscious'; 4 Commentary on The Secret of the Golden Flower; 5 The aims of psychotherapy; 6 A study in the process of individuation; 7 The Tavistock lectures; 8 The psychological aspects of the Kore; 9 On the nature of the psyche; 10 Three letters to Mr O. (1947); 11 Mysterium Coniunctionis; 12 Foreword to van Helsdingen: Beelden uit het Onbewuste; Afterword: Post-Jungian contributions; Bibliography180List of fantasies and visions; Subject index; Name index

Biography

Joan Chodorow is an analyst member of the C. G. Jung Institute of San Francisco, an analyst in private practice and a registered dance therapist.

"At last we have a collection of Jung's writings together in one clearly designed book. A valuable aid to research and writing on this important and creative Jungian subject. An outstanding contribution."
- Shelia Powell, Training Analyst in Private Practice

"This book is a treasure trove of Jung’s thoughts and ideas around Active Imagination and I found myself delighting in numerous new insights and discoveries. For example, I found the story of the patient who couldn’t grasp what active imagination was, until one day he found himself looking at a travel poster of a railway station and found himself fantasying about the poster, imagining walking into the poster and that he could walk up the hill and see what was on the other side, highly illuminating."
-Tasha Tollman, Centre of Applied Jungian Studies