1st Edition

Salome’s Embrace The Jungian Women

By Maggy Anthony Copyright 2018
    152 Pages
    by Routledge

    152 Pages
    by Routledge

    C. G. Jung, a man who accomplished a revolution in analytical psychology and made an impact both directly and indirectly on a great number of people, also took women seriously. The release of The Red Book has greatly added to our knowledge of Jung’s relationship with the feminine: from his mother, his wife and his extramarital affairs to the effect these had on the formulation of his psychology and on the women who had the courage to explore the need for a spiritual link to Jung and who became known as the Valkyries.

    In this revised and expanded study of the many women in Jung’s close circle, Anthony explores the women who followed Jung during his lifetime, his need for their company, and their contributions to his work. The book includes studies of Emma Jung, Sabina Spielrein and Toni Wolff, as well as Jung’s mother Emilie, and many other collaborators and followers. It also includes chapters on The Red Book, the Zurich Psychological Club and Dadaism. Including never-before published primary material, including interviews with the women themselves, Salome’s Embrace assesses their work and its value for the generations of Jungian analysts that have followed, including women who practice depth psychology today.

    The book will be of great interest to analytical psychologists and Jungian psychotherapists in practice and in training, academics and students of Jungian and post-Jungian studies, gender, and women’s history.

    Preface.  Acknowledgements.  Introduction.  Chapter One The Beginning ~ Opening to the World.  Chapter Two Mother ~ Emilie Preiswerk Jung.  Chapter Three The Beginnings of the Entourage ~ Emma Jung.  Chapter Four Siegfried’s Mate ~ Sabina Spielrein.  Chapter Five The Fragrance ~ Toni Wolff.  Chapter Six Zurich Psychological Club ~ Edith Rockefeller McCormick.  Chapter Seven Art Attack ~ Dancing with the Dadaists.  Chapter Eight Sieglinde ~ Linda Fierz-David.  Chapter Nine The Mysteries of Woman ~ M. Esther Harding.  Chapter Ten The Americans ~ Eleanor Bertine and Kristine Mann.  Chapter Eleven Eranos ~ Olga Frobe-Kapteyn.  Chapter Twelve The Alchemist’s Daughter ~ Marie-Louise von Franz.  Chapter Thirteen Impresaria ~ Jolande Jacobi.  Chapter Fourteen Priestess ~ Dion Fortune.  Chapter Fifteen The Veiled Lady of Visions ~ Christiana Morgan.  Chapter Sixteen The Rest of the Entourage.  Chapter Seventeen Jung ~ The Animus Mundi.  Chapter Eighteen The Jungian Women ~ An Assessment.  Chapter Nineteen She Who Remembers.  Chapter Twenty Into the Future.  Chapter Twenty-One The Hieros Gamos.  Appendix I. Jung’s Birth Chart by Philip Culjak.  II. Timeline ~ C.G. Jung and the Jungian Women.  Author Biography

    Biography

    Maggy Anthony studied at the C.G. Jung Institute in Zurich, Switzerland and the Zurich Clinic and Research Center for Jungian Psychology, and is a former family therapist at St. Mary's Medical Center/Maclean Center for Addictions and Behavioral Health in Nevada, USA. She is the author of several books and currently resides in Nevada.

    Any study concerned with the history of Jung's ideas and their establishment in modern thought will profit from Ms. Anthony's careful and enlightening survey of the early years of the Jungian community, and especially the support of Jungian women. (Charles Poncé, Rosebridge Graduate School, Human Relations Institute Santa Barbara and the San Francisco Art Institute)

    Maggy Anthony, in Salome's Embrace, her latest book about the women around Carl Jung, enlarges and deepens her previous studies. She uses original research, interviews and critical reassessments in mini-biographies which reclaim an essential part of women's often forgotten contributions to Jungian psychology. Her welcome and well-crafted work leaves the reader hungry for more. (Claire Douglas, PhD, is a clinical psychologist and a Jungian Analyst with the C. G. Institute of Los Angeles)

    Maggy Anthony's book conjures up the world of ideas as it developed around the figure of C.G. Jung -- and the fascinating personalities behind it. It offers telling insights into the early female followers of Jung and explores their intellectual passion for the project of analytical psychology in its nascent phase. As an exercise in cultural history in general and as a contribution to the institutional history of Jungian psychology in particular, this book brings alive a lost era whose significance is gradually being re-assessed and appreciated anew. (Paul Bishop, William Jacks Chair, University of Glasgow)