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The Jung Club
Schedule 2009-2010
Friday, Oct. 2, 2009
Borderlands: Western Culture and American Indian Concepts of Psyche,
Cosmology, and Healing
Jerome S. Bernstein, M.A.P.C., NCPsyA., is a clinical psychologist and
Jungian Analyst in private practice in Santa Fe, NM. He was the founding
President of the Jung Institute of Greater Washington, D.C., and Past President
of the Jung Institute of New Mexico, where he is a member of the teaching
faculty. He is the author of Living in the Borderland, Power and Politics, and
Co-Editor of C.G. Jung and the Sioux Traditions, as well as numerous articles on
international conflict, shadow dynamics, and various clinical topics. He has had
a thirty-five year relationship with Navajo and Hopi Indian cultures and for the
past six years has been working with a Navajo medicine man in a collaborative
clinical model.
Friday, Nov. 6th 2009
Jung and
Buddhism; Refining the Dialog
Polly Young-Eisendrath, PhD is an internationally renowned psychologist
and Jungian Psychoanalyst, whose work on the connections between Jungian
psychology and Buddhism is particularly esteemed. She is a Clinical Associate
Professor of Psychiatry, Clinical Associate Professor of Psychology at the
University of Vermont. She has published thirteen books translated into twenty
languages, including The Resilient Spirit, Women and Desire, The Self-Esteem
Trap: Raising Confident and Compassionate Kids in an Age of Self-Importance (her
most recent book, published by Little, Brown, 2008), and The Cambridge Companion
to Jung (edited with Terence Dawson and now available in a newly revised
edition). She has also authored numerous articles and chapters. She is engaged
in a full time practice in Central Vermont. She is a long-time practitioner of
Zen Buddhism and Vipassana.
Friday, Feb. 26th, 2010
(Postponed
until April 30th
) Themis: The
Feminine Archetype of Healing Individuals, Communities, and Cultures
Pamela Donleavy, J.D., NCPsyA , is a Jungian Analyst in private practice
in Arlington, MA. She is a former state and federal prosecutor in Philadelphia.
Pamela is the past President of the New England Society of Jungian Analysts, on
the Board of Directors of the National Association for the Advancement of
Psychoanalysis, and on the faculty of the C.G. Jung Institute–Boston, and the
Assisi Institute in Vermont. Pamela lectures widely, is the author of several
articles in Jungian journals, and a book with co-author Ann Shearer entitled
From Ancient Myth to Modern Healing, Themis: Goddess of Heart-Soul, Justice and
Reconciliation, published by Routledge.
Friday, March
12th, 2010
Psychoanalytical Psychotherapy and Human Goodness:
Theory and Techniques
Salman Akhtar, M.D. is Professor of Psychiatry at Jefferson Medical College
and Training and Supervising Analyst at the Psychoanalytic Center of
Philadelphia. He is the Book Review Editor of the Journal of Applied
Psychoanalytic Studies, and has served on the editorial boards of the Journal of
the American Psychoanalytic Association and the International Journal of
Psycho-Analysis. He is the author of many books including; Broken Structures,
Quest for Answers, Inner Torment, Immigration and Identity, New Clinical Realms,
Objects of Our Desire, Regarding Others (2007), and Comprehensive Dictionary of
Psychoanalyis (2009). Dr. Akhtar’s nearly 300 scientific publications also
include 29 edited volumes such as Freud Along the Ganges (2005), and The
Crescent and the Couch (2009). He has delivered many prestigious addresses at
such places as the Mayo Clinic. Dr. Akhtar is the recipient of the Journal of
the American Psychoanalytic Association's Best Paper of the Year Award (1995),
the Margaret Mahler Literature Prize (1996), the ASPP’s Sigmund Freud Award
(2000), Columbia University’s Robert Liebert Award for Distinguished
Contributions to Applied Psychoanalysis (2004), and the APA’s Award Outstanding
Teacher of Psychiatric Residents in the country (2005). He is a
Scholar-in-Residence at the Interact Theatre Company in Philadelphia and has
also published 6 volumes of poetry.
Friday, April. 30th, 2010 Themis: The
Feminine Archetype of Healing Individuals, Communities, and Cultures
Pamela Donleavy, J.D., NCPsyA , is a Jungian Analyst in private practice
in Arlington, MA. She is a former state and federal prosecutor in Philadelphia.
Pamela is the past President of the New England Society of Jungian Analysts, on
the Board of Directors of the National Association for the Advancement of
Psychoanalysis, and on the faculty of the C.G. Jung Institute–Boston, and the
Assisi Institute in Vermont. Pamela lectures widely, is the author of several
articles in Jungian journals, and a book with co-author Ann Shearer entitled
From Ancient Myth to Modern Healing, Themis: Goddess of Heart-Soul, Justice and
Reconciliation, published by Routledge.
Friday, May 14th, 2010
Friday, May 14th, 2010 Night Terrors:
A Titanic Experience
Linda Carter, MSN, CS is a Jungian analyst practicing in Boston and in
Providence, RI. She is the US Book Review Editor for the Journal of Analytical
Psychology and an Assistant Editor for the Jung Journal of San Francisco. She
edited Analytical Psychology: Contemporary Perspectives in Jungian Analysis
(2004) with Joe Cambray. In 2008, she published a paper called
“Bi-directionality of Influence in the Matisse/Picasso Relationship and in
Clinical Practice” for Quadrant. In press is a book chapter called "Countertransference
and Intersubjectivity” to be published in Murray Stein’s new edition of Jungian
Analysis. She is on the faculty of the C.G. Jung Institute of Boston. |