Calendar
Fall 1998
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Our calendar of events for Fall 1998. Please note:
Dates, locations, or speakers are subject to change. Check this website
for last minute changes.
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September 18-19, 1998
Murray Stein: Psyche at Work and Practicing Wholeness
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Almost everyone participates in work groups and organizations.
Often more time and energy is spent in these contexts than anywhere
else. Individuals can be wounded by the power of organizations
and the organizational unconscious. The question is how to
grow and benefit from these involvements. The individual
person's unconscious and the unconscious of the organization
intermesh, and the individual projects onto the organization as the
organization also projects onto the individual. Archetypal roles
are assigned and taken up, or resisted and fought. Conflicts arise
around misperceptions and misguided ambitions and longings. The
psychological task for both individual and organization is to become
conscious of these dynamics and to use them for further development.
In the lecture, Dr. Stein will apply Jungian theory and the alchemical
model to psyche in the workplace.
Wholeness is the goal of Jungian analysis. Indeed it is the
psychological goal of life itself. It is also something that one
must practice daily and in many ways. This workshop/seminar will
be based on Murray Stein's book Praciticing Wholeness and
will also focus on:
- Human nature and the practice of wholeness
- Wholeness and the shadow
- Dream work and active imagination
- Realtionships in depth
The format of the workshop will be lecture, discussion, and
experimental exercises.
Murray Stein, Ph.D., is a training analyst at the C. G. Jung
Institute of Chicago and is currently Vice President of the International
Association for Analytical Psychology. He has written many articles
and books, including Practicing Wholeness, Jung's Map
of the Soul, and Transformation - Emergence of the Self.
He received the NAAP's "Vision Award" for 1988.
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Lecture: Friday, September 18, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St.
$10 at the door; Members free.
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Workshop: Saturday, September 19, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St.
Public: $75. Members: $40 if registered by by 9/12; $50 afterwards.
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We offer Certificates of Attendance from NASW
for our weekend programs. Cost is $10 for each lecture (2 of CEU),
$10 for each workshop (usually 5.5 hours of CEU), or $15 for both.
We also offer our own OFCGJ generic certificate of attendance for
$5 for each lecture and $5 for each workshop. Register and pay at
the door for all certificates.
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October 16-17 1998
Kathie Carlson: Life's Daughter/Death's Bride
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While picking flowers, a young woman is raped and abducted away
from the familiar world of her mother to the ghostly world of Hades,
Lord of the Underworld. This splitting of the Mother and Daughter
archetype is the crux of an ancient myth that holds as much meaning
and healing for us today as it did for people in ancient times. The
abducted young woman was the Greek goddess Kore, later known as
Persephone, Queen of the Dead, and her mother was Demeter, the
grain goddess.
The story of how Kore becomes Persephone and is ransomed back from
Death to Life by her Mother has many meanings. It depicts an
experience all too familiar to us -- 'going under' to the shadow
side of patriarchal power, a ravaging that occurs not only between
and within men and women today but even between nations. But it
also offers hope in the face of these 'goings to hell'; it shows us
an archetypal Feminine force that is stronger than patriarchy and
can transform and redeem it, a force that meets the forces of Death
with an unabashed passion for Life as well as the power to gestate
and transform the death experience.
Using slides of beautiful ancient Greek art, Kathie's lecture
will tell the story of the grain goddess Demeter and Her daughter
Persephone as well as overview some of its myriad meanings for us
today.
The workshop will explore applications of this myth for both men and
women: for women, we will look at how today we live the myth
'backwards', beginning psychologically in Hades and having to find
the wholeness and powers of the Mother/Daughter archetype before
we can deal with the cultural shadow that Hades represents; we will
also look at men's experiences of this shadow side of the
patriarchal Masculine and at the Hades-identified man and his
transformation through the Eleusinian Mysteries. The format for the
workshop will be both didactic and experiential, allowing ample
time for exchange and discussion.
Kathie Carlson, M.A., studied extensively at the Jung Institute in
New York City and has practiced psychotherapy for over 22 years,
currently in New Haven, CT. She is the author of In Her Image: the
Unhealed Daughter's Search for Her Mother [Shambhala, 1989] and
Life's Daughter/Death's Bride: Inner Transformations Through the
Goddess Demeter/Persephone [Shambhala, 1997].
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Lecture: Friday, October 16, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St.
$10 at the door; Members free.
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Workshop: Saturday, October 17, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St.
Public: $75. Members: $40 if registered by by 10/10; $50 afterwards.
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We offer Certificates of Attendance from NASW
for our weekend programs. Cost is $10 for each lecture (2 of CEU),
$10 for each workshop (usually 5.5 hours of CEU), or $15 for both.
We also offer our own OFCGJ generic certificate of attendance for
$5 for each lecture and $5 for each workshop. Register and pay at
the door for all certificates.
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November 13-14, 1998
Craig San Roque: Australian Aboriginal Dreaming
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Lecture: Australian Aboriginal Dreaming: What it is. How
it works. What it has to teach us.
You may be familiar with the concept of the Australian Aboriginal
Dreaming or creation stories through Bruce Chatwin's novel The
Song Lines, or through Australian Aboriginal art works or popular
films and novels which convey something of the mystery and exoticism
of Aboriginal Culture. This illustrated lecture will help introduce
people who live on the American continent to the way the Australian
continent has been imagined and constructed (made) by the Aboriginal
Creation ancestors. The Dreaming is a very pragmatic way of telling
stories, encoding cultural and ecological knowledge and ensuring the
physical and spiritual survival of the groups of nomadic peoples
who inhabited Australia for tens of thousands of years. Craig San
Roque will explain how the dreaming works and what the aboriginal
creation stories have to teach contemporary peoples (of any culture).
Drawing upon extensive on-the-ground experience in central Australia,
upon friendships with Aboriginal people, and upon a Jungian
psychological background, he will attempt to give as straightforward
account as possible of what the dreaming is and what it is not.
This will involve some demystification and also some stories on
intercultural ethics.
Workshop: "Dead Drunk, Good God!" Cultural sharing.
Cultural Crossfire.
This workshop will continue from the basis of an understanding of
how ancient aboriginal creation stories work, but take it into the
European domain by introducing participants to the way ancient
European creation stories operate in ways similar to the
aboriginal. This will include showing a video performance and
documentary video of The Sugarman Project, a retelling in Central
Australia of the ancient Greek Dionysos epic in terms of
contemporary cultural dismemberment and alcohol and drug
intoxication and recovery. Craig will show how the European story
is helping Aboriginal people to come to grips mentally with the
impact of alcohol, but carry the paradigm further to show how
Dionysos as a "dreaming story" has potential especially for use
as a participatory initiation drama for young people of Australia
or even America. He wishes to invite you to consider that we may
have available to us a tool which can help handle both the
creative and destructive sides of intoxication, by a radical new
interpretation of our own cultural source material, in much the same
way as the aboriginal people rely upon their creation stories for
survival. The workshop will include a showing of the video, a
display of paintings made for the project, and some rehearsal
workshop performance of selected parts of the Dionysos/Sugarman
script.
Craig San Roque, Ph.D., is a Jungian analyst trained in
London who currently lives and works in Alice Springs, Northern
Territory, Australia. In addition to his psychoanalytic practice
he works in alcohol and substance abuse treatments with the indigenous
people of his native land. He is currently serving as president
of the Australian/New Zealand Society of Jungian Analysts.
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Lecture: Friday, November 13, 7:30 pm
Westminster Presbyterian Church, Great Hall
1624 NE Hancock
$10 at the door; Members free.
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Workshop: Saturday, November 14, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St.
(Please note that the workshop is in a different location than the lecture)
Public: $75. Members: $40 if registered by by 11/7; $50 afterwards.
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We offer Certificates of Attendance from NASW
for our weekend programs. Cost is $10 for each lecture (2 of CEU),
$10 for each workshop (usually 5.5 hours of CEU), or $15 for both.
We also offer our own OFCGJ generic certificate of attendance for
$5 for each lecture and $5 for each workshop. Register and pay at
the door for all certificates.
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November 19, 1998
Robert Bly and Marion Woodman: Special Lecture: The Maiden King: the triumph of the feminine
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Robert Bly and Marion Woodman interpret the deep psychological
insights imbedded in ancient stories, in this case a Russian folktale
about bringing feminine energy back into the world. The Maiden
King tells of an absent father, a possessive stepmother, a
false tutor, and a young man overwhelmed by a beautiful maiden and
her thirty sisters, sailing toward him on thirty boats. His weak
response sends her retreating in anger, and to find her once again
he must go on a quest that leads to Baba Yaga, the fierce old woman
of Russian folk tradition who represents not life in service of
death, but death in service of life. The male tendency to go to
sleep in the face of feminine magnificence, female fear of power
and of abandonment that leads to rage, the need to get beyond
oppositional thinking enroute to the Divine - these are issues the
book addresses with wisdom and lyrical beauty. The true heir to
Iron John, Bly's number-one national best-seller about men,
The Maiden King speaks eloquently to readers of Clarissa
Pinkola Estes, James Hillman, and Deborah Tannen.
This program is a joint presentation of the Oregon Friends of
C.G. Jung and Looking Glass Bookstore.
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Lecture: Thursday, November 19, 7:30 pm
Kaul Auditorium, Reed College
28th & SE Woodstock
$12 in advance, $18 at the door. Tickets may be ordered by sending
a check to:
Oregon Friends of C.G. Jung
811 N.W. 20th Ave
Portland, OR 97209
or by phoning or dropping by:
Looking Glass Bookstore
318 SW Taylor St.
Portland, OR
503-227-4760
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We offer Certificates of Attendance from NASW
for our weekend programs. Cost is $10 for each lecture (2 of CEU),
$10 for each workshop (usually 5.5 hours of CEU), or $15 for both.
We also offer our own OFCGJ generic certificate of attendance for
$5 for each lecture and $5 for each workshop. Register and pay at
the door for all certificates.
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December 4-5, 1998
Terry Gibson: Cin-Imago Dei
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What is the Soul? Where is the Soul? How do you discover Soul?
Or "make" Soul? Is it possible to lose the Soul? Does the Soul
have any special relationship with the body or the earth?
These perceptual theological questions will be explored through
the lens of contemporary cinema and Jungian psychology. If cinema
is the most attended modern Synagogue/Mosque/Cathedral-of-Presence
and depth psychology its contemporary therapeut and liturgist, then
this discussion is long overdue. This seminar proposes no solutions
to these questions but promises a lively exploration of them
through the multitudinous images of the soul in modern film.
Friday night's lecture will present an outline/overview
of the model which will be fleshed out more in-depth during the
Saturday workshop. There will be frequent use of video and
audio clips to illustrate the paradigm's terrain.
Terry L. Gibson, Ph.D., is a diplomate pastoral psychotherapist
and diploma Jungian analyst who practices individual and family
therapy with Pastoral Therapy Associates in Tacoma, Washington.
He lectures and writes widely on the basic theme of the integration
of psychotherapy and spirituality. He has been a frequent consultant,
faculty, supervisor, and facilitator for a variety of Pacific
Northwest universities, social service agencies, corporations,
and religious congregations. He has a passion for the blues, film,
and sea kayaks. A book he co-edited with Laura Dodson, Ph.D.,
Psyche and Family, by Chiron Press, is his most recent
publication.
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Lecture: Friday, December 4, 7:30 pm
Westminster Presbyterian Church, Great Hall
1624 NE Hancock
$10 at the door; Members free.
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Workshop: Saturday, December 5, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
West Hills Unitarian Fellowship, Forest Hall
8470 SW Oleson Road
(Please note that the workshop is in a different location than the lecture)
Public: $75. Members: $40 if registered by by 11/29; $50 afterwards.
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We offer Certificates of Attendance from NASW
for our weekend programs. Cost is $10 for each lecture (2 of CEU),
$10 for each workshop (usually 5.5 hours of CEU), or $15 for both.
We also offer our own OFCGJ generic certificate of attendance for
$5 for each lecture and $5 for each workshop. Register and pay at
the door for all certificates.
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