Carolyn and Ernest Fay Series in Analytical Psychology
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Item Joy, Inspiration and Hope(Texas A&M University Press, 1991) Kast, VerenaItem Integrity in Depth(Texas A&M University Press, 1992) Beebe, JohnItem The Two Million-Year-Old Self(Texas A&M University Press, 1993) Stevens, AnthonyItem The Stillness Shall Be the Dancing(Texas A&M University Press, 1994) Woodman, MarionItem Buddhism and the art of Psychotherapy(Texas A&M University Press, 1996) Kawai, HayaoItem Gender and Desire: Uncursing Pandora(Texas A&M University Press, 1997) Young-Eisendrath, PollyItem Transformation: emergence of the self(Texas A&M University Press, 1998) Stein, MurrayItem The Archetypal Imagination(Texas A&M University Press, 2000) Hollis, JamesItem Soul and Culture(Texas A&M University Press, 2003) Gambini, RobertoItem The Black Sun: the Alchemy and Art of Darkness(Texas A&M University Press, 2005) Marlan, StantonItem Memories of Our Lost Hands: Searching for Feminine Spirituality and Creativity(Texas A&M University Press, 2006) Toyoda, SonokoItem The Old Woman's Daughter(Texas A&M University Press, 2006) Douglas, ClaireItem Ethics and Analysis: Philosophical Perspectives and Their Application in Therapy(Texas A&M University Press, 2007) Zoja, LuigiItem The Therapeutic Relationship: Transference, Countertransference, and the Making of Meaning(Texas A&M University Press, 2009-09-11) Wiener, JanItem Synchronicity: Nature and Psyche in an Interconnected Universe(Texas A&M University Press, 2009-09-11) Cambray, JosephItem Connecting with South Africa: Cultural Communication and Understanding(Texas A&M University Press, 2012-02-06) Berg, AstridChild psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Astrid Berg states in her introduction that “South Africa is a microcosm.” It is a modern nation, yet many of its inhabitants follow ancient traditions. It is a nation with a colonial past marked by periods of violence, yet it has managed to make a largely peaceful transition to majority rule. It is a nation with eleven official languages embracing a great diversity of cultures and customs, and yet it is also a land where public debate is vigorous, free, and ongoing. In short, South Africa is a place where connections are being built and maintained—both those among people with long kinship and common culture, and those that reach across historical, racial, and class divides. “The western world is undeniably more advanced in certain areas of science and economic development,” Berg states, “but in other areas it seems to lag behind and could learn from” places like South Africa. In her work with children and infants, Berg has become instrumental in building connections with and among her fellow South Africans of all ethnicities. Based upon Berg’s 2010 Fay Lectures in Analytical Psychology at Texas A&M University, Connecting with South Africa: Cultural Communication and Understanding is both a self-reflective, subjective account and a scientific discourse on human development and intercultural communication. This volume will be warmly welcomed not only by psychoanalysts and those interested in Jungian thought and practice but also by anyone seeking more effective ways to learn from other cultures. Connecting with South Africa provides sensitive direction for those wishing to find healing and connection in a fractured society. ASTRID BERG, a Jungian analyst as well as a specialist in child and infant psychiatry, hosted the first conference on infant mental health in South Africa in 1995. Instrumental in founding the C. G. Jung Centre of Cape Town, she has also served as president of the Southern African Association of Jungian Analysts.Item Finding Jung(Texas A&M University Press, 2012-03-29) McMillan, Frank N.Frank N. McMillan Jr., a country boy steeped in the traditional culture of rural Texas, was summoned to a life-long quest for meaning by a dream lion he met in the night. On his journey, he followed the lead of the founder of analytical psychology, Carl Jung, and eventually established the world’s first professorship to advance the study of that field. McMillan, born and raised on a ranch near Calvert, was an Aggie through and through, with degrees in geology and petroleum engineering. As an adult working near Bay City, Texas, he was lunching in a country café when by chance he met abstract expressionist painter Forrest Bess, who was ecstatically waving a letter he had received from Jung himself. The artist’s enthusiastic description of Jung as a master psychologist, soul doctor, and healer led McMillan to the Jung Center in Houston, where he began reading Jung’s Collected Works. McMillan frequently said, “Jung saved my life.” Finding Jung: Frank N. McMillan Jr., a Life in Quest of the Lion captures McMillan’s journey through the words of his own journals and through reflections by his son, Frank III. David Rosen, the holder of the first endowed McMillan professorship at Texas A&M University, adds insights to the book, and the late Sir Laurens van der Post, whom the elder McMillan met at the Houston Jung Center in 1979, authored a foreword to the book before his death. This is a story that sheds light on the inner workings of the self as well as the Jungian understanding of the Self. In often lyrical language, it gives the human background to a major undertaking in the dissemination of Jungian scholarship and provides a personal account of a life lived in near-mythic dimensions. FRANK N. MCMILLAN III, an author, educator, and speaker, has been active in worldwide Jungian circles for the past twenty-five years. A former board member of the C. G. Jung Educational Center of Houston and a member of the International Association of Jungian Studies, he lives in Corpus Christi.