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Calendar
Spring 2005
|
| Our calendar of events for Spring, 2005. Please
note: Dates, locations, or speakers are subject to change. Check
this website for last minute changes. |
January
21-22, 2005
Steven M. Joseph: Symbolic Images and Energies
of Inner Transformation |
| LECTURE and WORKSHOP
In a time of cultural fragmentation and danger, many of us yearn
for wisdom and practical guidance that can help us live meaningful
lives. Such wisdom and direction must speak directly to our inner
lives as individuals at least as much as to our outer conduct in
the world and our relations with others. Contemporary and traditional
depth psychologies aim at facilitating essential processes of inner
transformation and renewal.
On Friday evening, we will explore "horizontal" and "vertical"transformations,
using two symbolic images: that of an inner psychic "law"
and its liberating transgression, and that of the psyche as an "oil
lamp" which transforms itself by consuming itself.
On Saturday, we will look at an all-encompassing "circumambulatory"
transformation, as depicted in an important set of Renaissance alchemical
illustrations.
All three of these image systems function much like dream images
which can facilitate a dialogue in depth between consciousness and
the unconscious. These systems belong to psychological and spiritual
lineages, which promote practical ways of working on oneself aimed
at fundamental inner transformation. We will discuss them in light
of the seminal insights of C. G. Jung.
Steven M. Joseph, M.D., is a Jungian analyst
and Board certified psychiatrist practicing in Albany, California
(near Berkeley), and in Tucson, Arizona. He is an analyst member
and training analyst of the C.G. Jung Institute, San Francisco,
and the immediate past editor of The San Francisco Jung Institute
Library Journal. He has written and taught on Jungian analytical
psychology and traditional sacred psychology, as well as on clinical
Jungian analysis in relation to other psychoanalytic schools. He
is a longtime student and teacher in the Jewish esoteric traditions
of Kabbalah and Hasidim.
Register (click here) Reading
List (click for PDF file) |
Lecture: Friday, January 21, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Sanctuary
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
Workshop: Saturday, January 22, 9:30 am
- 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Room 202
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $50 if registered by 1/15; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| February
11-12, 2005
Bradley TePaske, Ph.D. &
Arlene TePaske-Landau, Ph.D.: Aphrodite's Shadow in Beverly Hills
and Hollywood
|
| LECTURE: Aphrodite's Shadow in Beverly Hills and Hollywood
No mere sculpted image or poetic fragment from ancient time, Aphrodite
lives mightily today in the lilt, glance, style, indeed -- in the
Fate of countless women and the bedazzled admirers who pursue her.
Whatever Aphrodite's claim to Beauty and the 'erotic moment,' hers
is a shifting image whose nocturnal associations may have as much
to do with a night of death as a night of love. Drawing upon a childhood
in Beverly Hills and her ten years as a Hollywood actor, Dr. Landau
will thus explore the impact of the archetype on women¹s lives
with clinical examples, tales of bygone actresses, mythical amplification,
and feminine typology generally in this uniquely personal analysis
of the Aphrodite archetype.
WORKSHOP: Dionysus and Aphrodite: Desire and the Search
for Beauty
From Socrates or Euripides to the Inquisition to Jim Morrison or
the Rocky Horror Picture Show, the irresistible power of Dionysus
plays essentially the same role. Arousing erotic desires, fomenting
revolt, conjuring visionary experience, Dionysus unveils religious
dimensions of sexuality and the body that normative institutions
invariably condemn. While the cosmos of Dionysus includes an entourage
of phallic deities, his beloved Aphrodite (whose identity extends
to maenad, Ariadne, Persephone, Great Goddess) remains the prime
image of Beauty on which eros focuses. Dr TePaske will explore this
archetypal pair in various social and individual contexts, emphasizing
the intrapsychic tandem of desire and Beauty so central in the soul's
realization. (slides and video excerpts will be used).
Arlene TePaske-Landau, Ph.D. is a native of Beverly
Hills and a veteran of Hollywood film and television, who holds
a Bachelor of Fine Arts and a Masters Degree in Psychology from
Cal State Northridge, and both a Masters and Ph.D. Degree in Mythological
Studies from Pacifica Graduate Institute. Dr. Landau is an analyst
member of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles and the Interregional
Society of Jungian Analyst, and possesses a highly differentiated
grasp of both Jung’s classic psychological types and the mythically-based
typological approach of Archetypal Psychology (Hillman).
Bradley A. TePaske, Ph.D. is a graduate of the C.G. Jung
Institute of Zurich, a clinical psychologist, and an analyst member
of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles. An accomplished artist
and religious historian, Dr. TePaske holds an Master of Fine Arts
in Printmaking and Art History from UMASS Amherst and a Ph.D. in
Depth Psychology from the Union Institute of Cincinnati. His areas
of research include Hindu Tantra, Shamanism, Graeco-Roman Mystery
Religions, Gnosticism, and the Goddess traditions particularly those
of Kali, Mary, Magdalen, Sophia, Aphrodite, and Demeter/Persephone.
Register (click here) Reading
List (click for PDF file) |
Lecture: Friday, February 11, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
Workshop: Saturday, February 12, 9:30
am - 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $50 if registered by 2/5; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| March
11-12, 2005
LUIGI ZOJA, Ph.D.: The Father: Who is he? |
| LECTURE
The Image and Reality of the Father has been increasingly precarious
in
this past century.
From the American and French Revolution, through the Industrial
Revolution in which men
were demoted to chain workers, on to the experience of the young
father
as veteran by
way of two World Wars and the Vietnam war, and witness to the downfall
of
the Terrible
Fathers (the dictators of the 20th century), there has been a historical
and symbolic demise
in the status and power of the Father. As shown in myths that celebrate
him in Western
Antiquity, the Father has been largely a cultural construction;
recent,
fragile, and relative.
That historical and symbolic change reaches us through the collective
unconscious. Is it
surprising then that the increasing separation of fathers from their
children in every corner of
the Western world is occurring? We will discuss this century-old
phenomenon in light of the
dynamics of our collective experience, rather than as a sum of individual
cases.
WORKSHOP
Three classical characters: Hector of the Iliad, Ulysses of the
Odyssey,
and Aeneas of the Aeneid will
illustrate the ambivalence between man as Father and man as Competitive
Male.
A series of slides will show images of fathers in different places
and
times. They represent many gradations, from authoritarian to soft,
and
should offer opportunity for analysis and discussion.
Luigi Zoja, Ph.D. is a Training Analyst and graduate
of the C.G. Jung Institute, Zurich and Past President of CIPA (Centro
Italiano di Psicologia Analitica). Outgoing President of IAAP (International
Association of Analytic Psychology), he is current Chair of the
International Ethics Committee. He has taught at the School of Psychiatry
of the Faculty of Medicine, State University of Palermo, as well
as the C.G.Jung Institute and abroad. He has been in clinical practice
in Zurich, New York and Milan. He has published papers and books
in Italian, English, German, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Greek,
Russian, Polish, Czech, Lithuanian and Slovenian, including Drugs,
Addiction and Initiation, and Growth and Guilt, also
The Father, and The Global Nightmare. Jungian Perspectives on
September 11 (ed). which are available in English.
Register (click here) Reading
List (click for PDF file)
|
Lecture: Friday, March 11, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
Workshop: Saturday, March 12, 9:30 am -
4 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: 50 if registered by 3/5; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| April
15-16, 2005
ROSE-EMILY ROTHENBERG, M.A.: The Jewel in the
Wound
|
| LECTURE: The Jewel in the Wound
The body plays an integral role in the expression of personal myth.
Exploring the symbolic
dimension of a body symptom helps to unravel the mystery of wounding
and healing that lies hidden within the symptom itself. Dreams,
visions and artwork will be utilized to bring meaning to such manifestations.
Within this context, Ms. Rothenberg will describe her personal
experience with psychic wounds that manifested as physical scars
and that led her to Africa to study scarification rites. The scars,
instead of simply being the source of embarrassment and pain, became
the sacred jewels that illuminated the path of self-understanding,
thus creating a link to the spiritual meaning embedded in a body
symptom.
WORKSHOP: Body Symptoms in Individuation
Physical illness presents us with a challenge: to turn something
problematic into something meaningful.
Early primal experiences are manifest both psychologically and physiologically
through one's life journey. Suffering cannot be avoided when traveling
the road of individuation; yet renewal is born out of the darkness
of the unconscious and of the body.
This workshop will be a presentation and illustration of the role
of body symptoms in reflecting and stimulating the process of individuation.
It will include discussion of the archetypal dimension of diseases
of the skin and the intestines.
Participants are invited to bring examples from their experiences
involving the body.
Rose-Emily Rothenberg, M.A. is a Jungian Analyst
practicing in Pacific Palisades, California, and is on the faculty
of the C.G.Jung Institute of Los Angeles. Her special interest--on
which she has lectured nationally and internationally--is the relationship
between disease and the psyche, how body symptoms can be central
to discovering one's myth, and the benefit of using the expressive
arts to better understand one's body symptoms. She is the author
of The Jewel in the Wound.
Register (click here) Reading
List (click for PDF file)
|
Lecture: Friday, April 15, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
| Workshop: Saturday, April 16, 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
13-15, 2005
DENNIS PATRICK SLATTERY, Ph.D.: Grace in the Desert:
Awakening to the Gifts of Monastic Life
|
| When I had journeyed half of our life's way,
I found myself within a shadowed forest,
For I had lost the path that does not stray. (Dante, Inferno I of
the Commedia)
LECTURE
A desire stirs in each of us at some point in our lives, prompting
us to leave the familiar confines of family, neighborhood and routine
and take to the road in response to one of the oldest archetypal
impulses embedded in our psyche: pilgrimage.
The pilgrim is not a tourist, a road warrior, or one mobile for
the sake of movement alone. Pilgrimage is a questing after some
appetite in the soul that possessions or success will not satisfy.
A poetic journey stirred by the process of individuation, it is
also a sacred restlessness for an experience that transcends the
normative, everyday reality we live out, at times, almost unconsciously.
It is a journey both external and internal which insists on documenting
itself in memory and in the act of writing. I call this action "pengrimage."
Jung reminds us that "the quality of inwardness is missing
today:" ie an awareness of an inner correspondence or equivalence
with an actual event or situation in the world. Pilgrimage is an
attempt to allow for the presence of this correspondence between
psyche, spirit and world through silence, solitude and meditation.
WORKSHOP
Joseph Campbell and one's Personal Mythos
"Metaphor is the language of myth." (Thou Art That:
Transforming Religious Metaphor)
Morning Session
From September 1954 to August 1955, the well-known mythologist Joseph
Campbell made a year long pilgrimage to India, then on to southeast
Asia and Japan. In that journey he slowly realized what his life's
work was to be. Looking together at passages from the two journals
he kept (Baksheesh and Brahman, and Sake and Satori), we will note
his method, the content and the rising realization in Campbell of
his own personal mythology as recorded in these books.
Afternoon Session
Like Campbell, each of us has within a personal myth that seeks
its most appropriate path in the world. We will individually, and
then together, explore the contours of our own myth through 3-4
writing exercises designed to uncover the metaphors that comprise
our personal mythology.
Coming after our morning conversation, these exercises will allow
us to remember and choose an event or two in our own lives that
we could acknowledge as having a powerful influence on who we have
been and are continuing to become.
Dennis Patrick Slattery, Ph.D is core faculty,
Mythological Studies and Depth Psychology at Pacifica Graduate Institute
where he teaches courses in mythology, classical literature and
depth psychology. He is the author of 8 books, including: The
Idiot: Dostoevsky’s Fantastic Prince (1984); The Wounded Body:
Remembering the Markings of Flesh (2000); Grace in the Desert: Awakening
to the Gifts of Monastic Life (2004); Casting the Shadows: Selected
Poems (2002); Just Below the Water Line: Selected Poems (2004).
With Lionel Corbett he has co-edited Depth Psychology:
Meditations in the Field (2001) and Psychology at the Threshold
(2002).
Register (click here)
Reading List (click for PDF file)
|
Lecture: Friday, May 13, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
| Workshop: Saturday, May 14, 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. |
|
| June
11 , 2005
ANNUAL LIGHT-HEARTED EVENING
|
|
|
| You are all invited to the 30th Annual Light Hearted Evening for
the Oregon Friends of Jung!!
Potluck meal and live music at the West Hills Unitarian Fellowship.
Please bring a dish to share, plus your plate and utensils for
enjoyment. Drinks will be provided.
Come enjoy an easy evening of extroversion. See you there!
Directions:
From 217: exit North on SW Greenberg at Washington Square
Travel NE to Oleson Road, north to 8470 on the right
From Beaverton-Hillsdale Hwy: at Raleigh HIlls intersection,
turn
south on Oleson Road - south to 8470 on left. |
Saturday, June 11th, 6:00 pm
West Hills Unitarian Fellowship
8470 SW Oleson Road, Portland
Free to members and guests
|