Calendar
Winter & Spring 1998
|
|
Our calendar of events for Winter and Spring 1998.
|
February 20-21, 1998
Bradley A. TePaske: The New Mary Magdalene
|
|
The true identity of Mary Magdalene -- an alleged prostitute,
visionary and the disciple who Jesus loved the most -- is as
elusive as the biblical, Gnostic, and popular accounts of her are
diverse. With the help of a remarkably varied collect of some 120
images from the history of European painting, fascinating new
scriptural accounts from the Gnostic Nag Hammadi Library, a bit or
Catholic legend, and the dream of a contemporary woman, we will
consider the crucial psychological and religious significance of
this highly differentiated personality of Christian history. Mary's
kinship with Eve, Sophia, Aphrodite, anima mundi, and other
kindred figures will be explored, as well as her relationship with
Christ. Magdalene will be seen as a paradigm of feminine individuation and a reflection of the male anima, as
well as in relation to Gnostic ritual and the "Mystery of the
Bridal Chamber" on one hand, and as a solitary exile to Southern
France, on the other.
The workshop will review the nature and origins of Western Gnosticism,
Jung's fascination with the subject, and the varied mythical contexts in
which the Gnostic Magdalene appears. We will carefully consider the
visionary "Gospel of Mary" (from the Nag Hammadi Library), as well as the
Gnostic myth of Sophia's descent from supercelestial origins to become the
mother of the Jehovah, the Soul of the World, and a saving revealer figure.
Particular attention will be given to the development of this Sophia figure
from Hebrew Wisdom literature, classical mythology, and the Egyptian
Goddess, Isis, to Gnostic cosmology and religious ritual, as well as to some
intuitively penetrating images of the subtle body. Photos and mysteries from
the sacred sites of Mary Magdalene in the South of France will be included.
Bradley A. TePaske, Ph.D., holds an MFA in printmaking from the University
of Massachusetts, a Diploma in Analytical Psychology from the C. G. Jung
Institute of Zurich, and a Ph.D. in Depth Psychology from the Union
Institute of Cincinnati. He is a psychotherapist, a teacher, and a serious
student of Gnosticism, Hinduism, and the relationship between sexuality,
body, and the religious imagination. A native of Iowa of Dutch ancestry and
the father of two sons, he now lives and practices in Santa Barbara,
California.
|
Lecture: Friday, February 20, 7:30 pm
Westminster Presbyterian Church, Great Hall
$10 at the door; Members free.
|
Workshop: Saturday, February 21, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
Westminster Presbyterian Church, Fireside Room
Public: $75. Members: $40 if registered by by 2/14; $50 afterwards.
|
|
NASW Continuing Education
Credits are available for both the lecture and workshop. You may
purchase them from us when you register, or later at the door when
you first enter the lecture or workshop.
|
|
|
March 20-21, 1998
Ruth Amman: The Relationship between Psychology and
Architecture: The Interaction between the Built Outer World and
the Humane Inner World
|
|
We have to consider the fact that houses are works of people for
people. Architecture and psychology are inseparably bound
together. If we build a simple little hut in our garden or if we
are planning and constructing a complicated building, the psyche
of the architect or worker is always involved. The symbol of the
house, which contains the real concrete house, the one we can
touch, and the spiritual image - the imago of the house - is
always connected with the human being - with our body, soul, and
spirit.
The fundamental experience that people make houses and houses
make people expresses a process moving from the inner world into
the outer world, and from there, it reflects back to act again
on the inner world of people. This means that people get stamped
by architecture, and if we think further, many people can be
stamped by one person, namely, by the one who imagines and
constructs the building.
This thought alarmed me. I asked myself: Who are these people
who build? What image do they have of the people for whom they
build? How much do they know about the souls of the people? How
much about the interchange between the built outer world and the
humane inner world? Are they aware enough of the responsibility
they have for people and their environments?
The evening lecture will address the relationship between
psychology and architecture, the symbolism of the house, and the
inner-outer world process of "making houses." The workshop will
deepen the discussion of these questions and look into the
symbolism of the house in our dreams, as well. Slides will be
shown at both the lecture and workshop.
Ruth Amman is a native of Zurich, a Jungian analyst in that
city, and a practicing architect. She is a graduate of the C. G.
Jung Institute in Kusnacht, where she is now a lecturer and
training analyst. She studied with Dora Kalff, the pioneer of
therapeutic sandplay, and is a member of the international
Society for Sandplay Therapy. She is the author of Healing and
Transformation in Sandplay - Creative Processes Become Visible,
and The House in Dreams, forthcoming in English.
|
Lecture: Friday, March 20, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
$10 at the door; Members free.
|
Workshop: Saturday, March 21, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
Public: $75. Members: $40 if registered by by 3/14; $50 afterwards.
|
|
NASW Continuing Education
Credits are available for both the lecture and workshop. You may
purchase them from us when you register, or later at the door when
you first enter the lecture or workshop.
|
|
|
April 24-25, 1998
Beverly Zabriskie: Ancient Egypt
|
|
Lecture: Creation and Recreation: Ancient Egypt and Modern Life
The engaged and considered life demands many beginnings. The
multiple creation myths of the most mindful of peoples, the
ancient Egyptians, not only addressed their questions about the
origins and nature of the universe and human life, but offered
stirring images for the first and continuous emergences of
physical awareness, psychic consciousness, creative reflection
and expression. Images similar to those we will view and discuss
from Egyptian art and myth often appear in the dreams of modern
women and men in moments of inner pressure and outer crisis,
when growth, restoration and renewal are essential for on-going
life.
Workshop: The Depth Psychology of Ancient Egypt
Five thousand years ago, vital Egyptian minds were expressing
humankind's concerns about the know, the unknown, and the
unknowable. Just as we do, they confronted tensions between
order and chaos, and sought balance between harmony and tension,
attraction and aggression, good and evil, life and death, light
and dark, mortal time and a timeless eternal.
The great conceptions of Egyptian myth, such as Hathor, Maat,
and Thoth, reached toward the comprehensive understanding which
gives breadth and depth to our interface with the universe. The
story of Isis and Osiris dramatizes the intra-psychic struggles,
interpersonal intensities, and transformative possibilities of a
depth connection to experience. Using Egyptian images and texts,
this seminar offers a glimpse into the resonance between the
Egyptian sensibility and the Jungian understanding of the
inclusive life.
Beverly D. Zabriskie, CSW, NcPsyA, is a Jungian analyst
in New York City. She is on the faculty of the C. G. Jung
Institute of New York, and the C. G. Jung Center of Mexico City.
She is an assistant editor of The Journal of Analytical
Psychology, and past president of the National Association for
the Advancement of Psychoanalysis. She has lectured extensively
in the United States and Europe on the psychological valance of
Egyptian myth, the alchemical nature of psychic images, and on
analytic thought and practice. Her recent publications include
Thawing the Frozen Accidents, Fermentation, and
The Matter of Psyche.
|
Lecture: Friday, April 24, 7:30 pm
Westminster Presbyterian Church, Great Hall
$10 at the door; Members free.
|
Workshop: Saturday, April 25, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
Westminster Presbyterian Church, Fireside Room
Public: $75. Members: $40 if registered by by 4/18; $50 afterwards.
|
|
NASW Continuing Education
Credits are available for both the lecture and workshop. You may
purchase them from us when you register, or later at the door when
you first enter the lecture or workshop.
|
|
|
April 26, 1998
Beverly Zabriskie: Special Lecture
The Living Images of Ancient Egypt
|
|
Co-sponsored with the
Portland Art Museum in support of their special exhibit:
Splendors of Ancient Egypt
March 6 - August 16
In the beauty and grace of their art, the ancient Egyptians
created images which expressed some of the simple truths about
the well-lived life and the most profound hopes about an ongoing
life after death. The objects of their daily routines, their
animals, and their gods were imagined and approached as vital
representations of the wonders and mysteries of a meaningful
existence. Through understanding the Egyptian sensibility, we
come to appreciate their world and our own.
We are pleased to co-sponsor this special lecture with the
Portland Art Museum, as part of
our mission to present a Jungian perspective to the wider community.
We invite you to support this effort by attending the Sunday
lecture, which will complement the Friday and Saturday programs
and the Portland Art Museum's special exhibit:
The Splendors
of Ancient Egypt.
|
Lecture: Sunday, April 26, 2:00 pm
Portland Art Museum, Berg Swann Auditorium
1219 SW Park Avenue
Free.
|
|
|
May 15-16, 1998
Pauline Napier
|
|
Lecture: Merlin-Jung Enchained
From Heinrich Zimmer's The King and the Corpse: Tales of the
Soul's Conquest of Evil, this lecture will make a first
attempt to explore the story of Merlin's enchainment by the
goddess with that of Jung's enchainment by the anima.. What
relationship, if any, does this phenomenon play in the
connection that a man has with this soul and in his
relationships with other men and women?
Workshop: In Search Of
There are multitudinous ways in which the soul reveals itself
for each individual. During the day-long workshop, we will
journey into the past as a way of bringing to consciousness the
ground out of which one's individual soul - one's individual
myth - emerged. Each participant is asked to bring a journal and
some form of drawing material.
Pauline Napier, a licensed psychologist, is in private
practice in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She received her
"Diplomate in Analytical Psychology" from the C. G. Jung
Institute, Zurich. In one form or another, she has taught from
pre-school through graduate school, including eleven years in
the Behavioral Sciences Department of Point Park College. For a
number of those years she also held the position of Director of
psychological Counseling Services. Among other commitments, she
has served as a consultant to Project 60, a Pennsylvania maximum
security prison program, and in a medical hospital setting for
groups with psychosomatic illness. Her greatest challenge and
source of energy comes from her family connections, both
personal and archetypal.
|
Lecture: Friday, May 15, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St.
$10 at the door; Members free.
|
Workshop: Saturday, May 16, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St.
Public: $75. Members: $40 if registered by by 5/9; $50 afterwards.
|
|
NASW Continuing Education
Credits are available for both the lecture and workshop. You may
purchase them from us when you register, or later at the door when
you first enter the lecture or workshop.
|
|
|
June 6, 1998
Light-Hearted Evening
|
|
A free program and potluck for members and guests.
Please bring your favorite dish to serve 6 to 8 people, and
your own table service. Coffee and tea will be provided.
|
Saturday, June 6, 6:00 pm
West Hills Unitarian Fellowship
8470 SW Oleson Road
|
|