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    Teaching Jung
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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 13 October 2011

    • ISBN 9780199735426
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages304 pages
    • Size 234x156x20 mm
    • Weight 635 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    This book offers a collection of original articles presenting several different approaches to Jung's psychology in relation to religion, theology, and contemporary culture. The contributors describe their teaching of Jung in different academic contexts, with special attention to the pedagogical and theoretical challenges that arise in the classroom.

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    Long description:

    Swiss psychologist Carl Jung (1875-1961) has made a major, though still contested, impact on the field of religious studies. Alternately revered and reviled, the subject of adoring memoirs and scathing exposes, Jung and his ideas have had at least as much influence on religious studies as have the psychoanalytic theories of his mentor, Sigmund Freud. Many of Jung's key psychological terms (archetypes, collective unconscious, individuation, projection, synchronicity, extroversion and introversion) have become standard features of religious studies discourse, and his extensive commentaries on various religious traditions make it clear that Jung's psychology is, at one level, a significant contribution to the study of human religiosity. His characterization of depth psychology as a fundamentally religious response to the secularizing power of modernity has left a lasting imprint on the relationship between religious studies and the psychological sciences. This book offers a collection of original articles presenting several different approaches to Jung's psychology in relation to religion, theology, and contemporary culture. The contributors describe their teaching of Jung in different academic contexts, with special attention to the pedagogical and theoretical challenges that arise in the classroom.

    Jung remains an important figure in the humanistic study of religion because he stood for a number of key insights-about the limits of rationalism, about the universality of the human psyche, about the reality of the paranormal, and about the necessity and dangers of religion-that remain as potent now as when he first articulated them. Teaching Jung admirably explores this promise and this scandal through the prisms of pedagogy and classroom practice.

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction: Teaching With and Against Jung
    Kelly Bulkeley and Clodagh Weldon
    Part I. Different Educational Settings
    Chapter One: The Challenge of Teaching Jung in the University
    David Tacey
    Chapter Two: Misprision:
    Pitfalls in Teaching Jung in a University Religious Studies Department
    David L. Miller
    Chapter Three: Teaching Jung in a Theological Seminary and a Graduate School of Religion
    Ann Belford Ulanov
    Chapter Four: Teaching Jung in an Analytic Psychology Institute
    Murray Stein
    Part II. The Interpretation of Religious Texts and Experiences
    Chapter Five: Jung's Approach to Myth
    Robert Alan Segal
    Chapter Six: Jung's Engagement with Christian Theology
    Charlene Burns
    Chapter Seven: God on the Couch:
    Teaching Jung's Answer to Job
    Clodagh Weldon
    Chapter Eight: Type-wise:
    Using Jung's Theory of Psychological Types in Teaching Religious Studies Undergraduate and Graduate Students
    Christopher Ross
    Part III. Jung's Life, Work, and Critics
    Chapter Nine: Personal Secrets, Ethical Questions
    John Haule
    Chapter Ten: Anima, Gender, Feminism
    Susan Rowland
    Chapter Eleven: Jung as Nature Mystic
    Meredith Sabini
    Chapter Twelve: Teaching Jung in Asia
    Jeremy Taylor
    Part IV. Jungian Practices in the Classroom and Beyond
    Chapter Thirteen: Teaching Jung and Dreams
    Kelly Bulkeley
    Chapter Fourteen: Jung and Winnicott in the Classroom:
    Holding, Mirroring, Potential Space and the Self
    Laurel McCabe
    Chapter Fifteen: Jung and the Numinous Classroom
    Bonnelle Strickling
    Chapter Sixteen: Can There Be a Science of the Symbolic?
    John Beebe

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