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Calendar
Spring 2004
|
| Our calendar of events for Spring, 2004. Please
note: Dates, locations, or speakers are subject to change. Check
this website for last minute changes. |
January
16-17, 2004
John Beebe: Types of the Shadow
|
| Lecture: Types of the Shadow. According to Jung's
theory of psychological types, it is our birthright to differentiate,
in the course of individuation, four function-attitudes that together
define the wholeness of our mature standpoint. But Jung has
postulated a possible eight functions of consciousness. What about
the four functions that remain in shadow? How do they operate, and
what is their role in our development as human beings? In this lecture, illustrated
with clips from popular films, Dr. John Beebe will help us identify
the different archetypal characteristics of our shadow functions
and will show how they go about their work of challenging, undermining,
and defending the ego.
Workshop: Integrating the Shadow Functions . Just as
ego-consciousness is unevenly distributed between different function-attitudes
that define our strengths and weaknesses, so too is the unconsciousness
of our shadow deployed in weaker and stronger ways. Getting to
know the archetypes and psychological types of our shadow helps
us to recognize the shadow and make use of its defensive power
in a self-enhancing way. Dr. Beebe will demonstrate
in dialogue with the participants how this method of analysis can
clarify certain difficult personal interactions, dreams, and forms
of self-attack and sabotage.
Dr. John Beebe, a Jungian analyst and psychiatrist
in practice in San Francisco , is the immediate past President
of the C. G. Jung Institute of San Francisco. His most recent
publication is Terror, Violence, and the Impulse to Destroy:
Perspectives from Analytical Psychology (Daimon Publishers, 2003). An
internationally recognized clinical teacher of Jungian psychology,
he has lectured on psychological types throughout the United States
and in Europe , and his writings and ideas on this subject and
others have appeared in the Chiron Clinical Series, The Journal
of Analytical Psychology , Psychological Perspectives and
several books. Dr. Beebe is the author of the book Integrity
in Depth , a study of the archetype of moral wholeness,
and he is particularly interested in the way an understanding
of our typology can foster the development of the capacity to take
responsibility for our impact on others. An avid film buff, Dr.
Beebe frequently draws upon classic and contemporary American
movies to illustrate how the various types of consciousness and
unconsciousness interact to produce the stories of our lives that
Jung called individuation.
Reading List (click here) |
Lecture: Friday, January 16, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Sanctuary
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
Workshop: Saturday, January 17, 9:30 am
- 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Room 202
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $50 if registered by 1/14; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| February
13-14, 2004
BRYAN WITTINE: Spiritual Longing
and Its Shadow
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| Lecture and Workshop
The religions and myths of many times and cultures tell us that
the human soul's deepest desire is its longing for God. Even
people who feel disillusioned with traditional religions or disenchanted
with spiritual teachers still yearn for something transcendent.
Whenever we long for the transcendent, however, forces from the
deep unconscious also swing into play. Walking a spiritual
path not only evokes states of illumination; it challenges us to
face the darkness within ourselves.
In this lecture and workshop, Dr. Wittine will explore spiritual
longing and its shadow. Spiritual longing might overwhelm the ego,
cover over wounded parts of the personality, perpetuate our inner
critic, lead to a split between "higher" and "lower" self-needs,
and derail individuation. We might project our longing onto
lovers and teachers, onto food, sex, and drugs, or find it hidden
in our grandiosity and desire for power. Dr. Wittine concludes
that if we internalize our longing rather than externalizing it
onto images, people, and things, it will guide us toward a new
experience of God, which recognizes the transcendent in all aspects
of life.
Bryan Wittine, PhD is a Jungian analyst in private
practice in San Francisco and Mill Valley, California. He
is a member of the faculty at the C. G. Jung Institute of San Francisco
and an adjunct faculty member of the masters program in depth psychology
at Sonoma State University. He has studied with Buddhist
and Sufi teachers for over 30 years and has written and lectured
extensively on spirituality, narcissism, and depth psychotherapy.
Reading List (click here) |
Lecture: Friday, February 13, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
Workshop: Saturday, February 14, 9:30
am - 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $50 if registered by 2/8; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| March
19-20, 2004
LYN COWAN : The Blue Shadows of Melancholy |
| Lecture: Images in a Melancholic Eye
Until the mid-19th century, melancholy was imagined as a sacred
affliction from the gods, a madness characteristic of genius and
the most difficult and complex temperament. At the height
of the Renaissance, it was imagined in personified form as a majestic
female figure; artists and poets looked to her as their Muse. But,
in the twentieth century, melancholy all but disappeared from the
professional imagination, to be replaced by the diagnostic categories
of depression. Where did Melancholy go? How did she
lose her voice? How can we call her into life again, listen
to her wisdom, take new creative heart from within her depths? This
lecture/slide presentation will use both spoken word and photographs
to re-discover Melancholy as Muse.
Workshop: Images In a Melancholic Voice
The melancholic mood has a distinctive tone which can be heard as
clearly in certain kinds of writing as in music. Our discussion will
continue themes introduced in the lecture, particularly the idea
that melancholy, unlike depression, is a creative matrix, seeing
to answer these questions: How can we hear the
Muse in our own melancholic moments? What sort of expression
does the Muse give us when we try to express something from
a melancholy place in the psyche? Why is this important for
our psychic health? Participants are asked to bring
paper and pen and, if possible, a photograph or snapshot that
has personal meaning.
Lyn Cowan, Ph.D. , has been a practicing Jungian
analyst since 1980. Recently re-located to Houston,
Texas, from the Twin Cities, she teaches at the C.G. Jung
Education Center of Houston and will be Adjdunct Professor at the
University of Houston beginning in the fall of 2004. Dr.
Cowan served as Director of Training of the Inter-Regional
Society of Jungian Analysts for six years and is a past president
of the Society. Her books include Tracking the White
Rabbit: A Subversive View of Modern Culture and Masochism:
A Jungian View , and third book on melancholy is in negotiation
for publication. She has also had four major exhibits of
her photographic work, and continues to pursue her lifelong passion
for thoroughbred horse racing.
Reading List (click here) |
Lecture: Friday, March 19, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
Workshop: Saturday, March 20, 9:30 am
- 2:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: 50 if registered by 3/13; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| April
16-17, 20024
MARK KURAS : Jung, Tolkien, and the Fate of
Mythopoesis in Postmodernity
|
| LECTURE
In Western Thought, the hero, the mythic expression of ego-development,
expands consciousness by subduing the dragon ,
i.e. the “chaos” sensed by ego-consciousness in the categories
of nature, instinct, mother. In this program we will explore the
idea that while Jung initially abided by this traditional fantasy
of ego-development, there is a persistent dimension in his work
that recognized the implications of consciousness becoming encapsulated
in the ego-complex; this obliged Jung to accentuate the actions
in the psyche that strive toward a post-ego mythology.
Though nowadays consumed as a fashionable expression of a classic
hero myth, J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings , exposes
the perplexing failure of the hero to effect psychic transformation
in the contemporary ‘postmodern' psyche. This incapacity, ironically
present as the hero's triumph, or, in psychological terms the pinnacle
of ego-development, signifies, in Tolkien, a threat to “middle
earth”, an unprecedented waning of the mythopoeic factor of the
psyche. The claim is that the hero, through this deconstruction,
presently, leads not, as it once had, into progressive states of
originality, but into regressive states of compliance. This is
manifest politically as globalization, and in current psychopathology
as an “empty” depression, both of which are instinctively felt
as a distance from “mother”. I take these to be the abiding concern
of Jung's analytical psychology, and Tolkein's Trilogy; taken together
they inform a radical rereading of the developmental psychology
and heroic mythology that dominantly impose upon the current practice
of psychotherapy.
WORKSHOP
In this workshop we will expose the residency of these themes
in the tedium of daily life. Participants will bring stuff that
seems the least psychologically deep.
These contents are those most under
the aegis of the hero, and live, in what Tolkien calls “Mordor”.
In Jung's theorization, they would thus attract the most empathy
from the psyche. Foreshadowed in this empathic process, is the
post-heroic figure needed in each psyche now to live past the ego's
encapsulation of consciousness and in so doing effect the transformations
in consciousness necessitated by our postmodern condition.
Mark Kuras, Ph.D., is a Jungian Analyst and Clinical
Psychologist. He is a graduate of the C.G. Jung Institute of New
York, and is on the faculty of the College of Physicians and Surgeons
at Columbia University . He is Director of Training at the Jungian
Psychology Association in New York , review editor at the Journal
of Analytical Psychology and a former associate editor of the Jungian
Journal of Theory and Practice. His papers have appeared in both
journals, as well as in Quadrant. He maintains a private practice
in New York City.
Reading List (click here) |
Lecture: Friday, April 16, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
| Workshop: Saturday, April 17, 9:30
am - 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: 50 if registered by 4/10; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| May
14-15, 2003
JOAN CHODOROW : Emotions and the Archetypal Imagination |
| LECTURE: EMOTIONS AND THE ARCHETYPAL IMAGINATION
This lecture will look at the nature of the emotions as they have
evolved and continue to develop, from the primal, untransformed
depths toward the highest values of human culture. The tendency
in recent decades toward deconstruction of values may potentiate
a compensatory development as individuals in many walks of life
seek a differentiated experience of affects and their symbolic expression,
shaped by eternal ideals that appear to be wired into the psyche.
Lecture includes slides to illustrate.
WORKSHOP: ACTIVE IMAGINATION AND THE LIVING BODY
By using the body to access and express the imagination, individuals
may discover experiences that bridge the realms of body and psyche,
instinct and spirit, affect and image, memory and emergence.
This one-day workshop will introduce movement as a form of active
imagination. Sometimes called "authentic movement" or "movement
in depth"; we focus attention on bodily sensations, images, and
feelings, which are then allowed to develop into spontaneous movement.
The mover works with eyes closed, in the presence of a witness,
whose task it is to hold and contain the experience of the person
moving. Morning and afternoon sessions include lecture,
discussion and movement experience, with special attention to the
inner experience of the mover, the inner experience of the witness
and the dynamics of their relationship. Participants are invited
to bring journals and/or art materials.
Joan Chodorow, Ph.D. is an analyst and faculty
member of the C. G. Jung Institute of San Francisco. Publications
include Dance Therapy and Depth Psychology‹The Moving Imagination
(Routledge 1991), C. G. Jung on Active Imagination
(Princeton University Press, 1997), and the forthcoming Active
Imagination: Healing from Within (TAMU Press). She
lectures and teaches internationally as well as closer to home.
Reading List (click here)
|
Lecture: Friday, May 14, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
| Workshop: Saturday, May 15, 9:30 am
- 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: 50 if registered by 5/8; $60 afterwards.
Enrollment is limited for this workshop.
We regret
we will not be able to accept scrip for this workshop.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|