Pub Date : 2023-04-03DOI: 10.1080/00332925.2023.2242022
Roberta Bassett Corson
AbstractToni Wolff posited her theory of the “Structural Forms of the Feminine Psyche” in the mid-20th century. In this work she named four feminine archetypes: mother, hetaira, amazon, and medial. While there are interrelationships between each archetype, here I explore only the medial archetype as it relates to the mother archetype. The process of discovery involved deep, lengthy interviews with medial women. The feminine medial archetype is the least recognized in contemporary Western culture, and there are few roles in which a medial woman may express the power of this archetype. In fact, most medial women have never heard this term used to describe them. Many medial women consciously or unconsciously hide their true nature underground or move to the edges of society to protect this innate quality. Others occupy roles that don’t fit who they truly are, in which case the woman experiences an internal restlessness, tension, or despair. In my studies of the medial archetype, I interviewed many medial women on different aspects of their experience. All indicated they had an uneasy or complicated relationship with the mother archetype and also with the mother role. I shall explore some of what this has been for them, as well as why it may be so common. Finally, I invite a glimpse into the courtroom at the trial of the man who raped my daughter as an illustration of how my own mother and medial energies interacted. Additional informationNotes on contributorsRoberta Bassett CorsonRoberta Bassett Corson, PhD, is author of the book Stepping Out of the Shadows: Naming and Claiming the Medial Woman Today (published by Mandorla Books, 2022, and honored with a silver award by Nautilus Book Awards). She is a retired clinical/depth psychologist and United Methodist clergy. Her dissertation was on the Wounds of Medial Women in Contemporary Western Culture. As a medial woman who is aware of the many women like her who long to be called by name, she continues to explore the dimensions of mediality with the hope that we can all be named and live freely in our world today.
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Pub Date : 2023-04-03DOI: 10.1080/00332925.2023.2242023
Donna Glee Williams
AbstractIn the spirit of dreamwork and poetry, this essay explores the experience and conceptual drapery of the hot flash as if it were not an objective reality but a symbol. Looking not for one single correct interpretation but for multiple layered meanings (as in a dream or in a poem) illuminates a rich network of connotations and associations of hot flashes on many levels: archetypal, historical, cultural, linguistic, scientific, and personal. Additional informationNotes on contributorsDonna Glee WilliamsPushcart Prize-nominee Donna Glee Williams, author of the eco-fable The Night Field (Mobius, 2023), was born in Mexico, graduated from Tulane University, then earned an MFA and PhD from LSU. The imagined societies in her fiction owe a lot to years of wayfaring across four continents. These days she walks in the woods, writes, and leads dream groups from her cabin in the Appalachians. Her poetry has appeared in Bellingham Review, New Orleans Review, New Laurel Review, New Delta Review, New Orleans Times-Picayune, Maple Leaf Rag, Writing from the Inside, Beltane Papers, Mesechabe, Fly, Science Fiction Association’s Star*Line, and Friends Journal.
摘要:本文以梦幻和诗歌的精神,探讨了热流的经验和概念外衣,仿佛它不是一个客观的现实,而是一个象征。不要只寻找一个正确的解释,而是要寻找多层次的含义(如在梦中或诗中),这揭示了潮热在许多层面上的丰富内涵和联系:原型、历史、文化、语言、科学和个人。其他信息撰稿人注:ushcart奖提名人Donna Glee Williams,生态小说the Night Field (Mobius, 2023)的作者,出生于墨西哥,毕业于杜兰大学,然后在路易斯安那州立大学获得硕士学位和博士学位。她小说中所想象的社会在很大程度上归功于她多年来在四大洲的旅行。这些天,她在树林里散步,写作,并在她位于阿巴拉契亚山脉的小屋里带领梦之队。她的诗歌曾发表在《贝灵汉评论》、《新奥尔良评论》、《新月桂评论》、《新三角洲评论》、《新奥尔良时报picayune》、《枫叶Rag》、《Inside Writing from the Inside》、《Beltane Papers》、《Mesechabe》、《Fly》、科幻协会的《Star Line》和《朋友杂志》上。
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Pub Date : 2023-04-03DOI: 10.1080/00332925.2023.2242035
Naomi Ruth Lowinsky
Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Additional informationNotes on contributorsNaomi Ruth LowinskyNaomi Ruth Lowinsky is an analyst member of the San Francisco C.G. Jung Institute where she has led a poetry writing workshop, Deep River, for many years, and the poetry editor for Psychological Perspectives. A widely-published poet, Lowinsky has won the Blue Light Poetry Prize, the Obama Millennial Award, and the Atlanta Review Merit Award. Her fifth poetry collection is Death and His Lorca.
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Pub Date : 2023-04-03DOI: 10.1080/00332925.2023.2242038
Melissa Ann Reed
Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Notes1 From E. E. Cummings’ (Citation2012) poem, out of the lie of no. This poem marks reading plants as taught by Stephen Buhner (Citation2004) in The Secret Teachings of Plants. With special thanks to Stephen Aizenstat’s “Dream Tending” practice.Additional informationNotes on contributorsMelissa Ann ReedMelissa Ann (Mei An) Reed, PhD, is an appreciator of C. G. Jung’s work and the author of Strange Kindness, published by University Press of America, about one of the first Chinese women to practice integrative medicine in both China and the United States.
点击增大图片尺寸点击减小图片尺寸注1出自E. E. Cummings (Citation2012)的诗,出自no的谎言。这首诗是Stephen Buhner (Citation2004)在《植物的秘密教导》中所教的阅读植物的标志。特别感谢Stephen Aizenstat的“Dream Tending”实践。附加信息撰稿人梅莉莎·安·里德梅莉莎·安(梅安)·里德博士是c.g.荣格作品的鉴赏者,也是美国大学出版社出版的《奇怪的善良》一书的作者,她是第一批在中美两国实践中西医结合的中国女性之一。
{"title":"Lessons From a Violet","authors":"Melissa Ann Reed","doi":"10.1080/00332925.2023.2242038","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.1080/00332925.2023.2242038","url":null,"abstract":"Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Notes1 From E. E. Cummings’ (Citation2012) poem, out of the lie of no. This poem marks reading plants as taught by Stephen Buhner (Citation2004) in The Secret Teachings of Plants. With special thanks to Stephen Aizenstat’s “Dream Tending” practice.Additional informationNotes on contributorsMelissa Ann ReedMelissa Ann (Mei An) Reed, PhD, is an appreciator of C. G. Jung’s work and the author of Strange Kindness, published by University Press of America, about one of the first Chinese women to practice integrative medicine in both China and the United States.","PeriodicalId":42460,"journal":{"name":"Psychological Perspectives-A Quarterly Journal of Jungian Thought","volume":"61 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2023-04-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"135718409","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":"","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2023-04-03DOI: 10.1080/00332925.2023.2242026
Elliott Morgan
AbstractThe internet has afforded modern culture unprecedented forms of communication, but it has also led to pockets of isolation that reinforce one’s most unconscious impulses. One example of this shadow side of the internet is the proliferation of far-right internet subcultures, which value hyper-rationality while devaluing anything that is seemingly irrational, or, for them, uncomfortably fluid. Rather than fight fire with fire by distantly judging these subcultures, this article explores their potential mythical, archetypal roots. Jungian and archetypal psychology assert that the Greek gods are alive and well as powers and principles in the Western psyche, implying that even internet subcultures unwittingly enact these ancient motifs. This article shows how certain facets of Apollonian consciousness might be pulling the strings of this high-strung demographic. These facets include Apollo’s jealousy, his determination to win at all costs, and his tumultuous love life. Emphasis is paid to how these aspects of Apollo appear broadly in online political discourse and specifically in the subculture of the incel, or “involuntary celibate.” My intention is to show how this dark face of Apollo, the god of music, can also act as a pied piper for a demographic of increasingly disenchanted young men. I conclude with a brief discussion about what mythic figure might be most effective in puncturing this psychological inflation. Although Dionysus, as an archetypal pattern, is Apollo’s complementary opposite, I propose it is Hermes, the god of communication, who must now enter the chat. Additional informationNotes on contributorsElliott MorganElliott Morgan is a comedian and third-year graduate student at Pacifica Graduate Institute studying depth psychology with a specialization in Jungian psychology and archetypal studies. He earned his bachelor’s degree in zoology from the University of Florida and currently lives in Los Angeles, California. He works as a standup comedian, internet host, and podcaster. He co-hosts The Fundamentalists podcast with Dr. Peter Rollins and has appeared as a guest on the podcast This Jungian Life.
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Pub Date : 2023-04-03DOI: 10.1080/00332925.2023.2242018
Nancy Mozur
Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size ACKNOWLEDGMENTSA special thanks for their assistance with this brief introduction goes to the Estate of Luchita Hurtado, the Luchita Hurtado Studio, and Hauser & Wirth. I am especially grateful to John Mullican, Joseph Conder, and Maisey Cox of Hauser & Wirth. To view more of Luchita Hurtado’s artwork, please contact Hauser & Wirth at https://www.hauserwirth.comAdditional informationNotes on contributorsNancy MozurNancy Mozur is an artist and writer who serves as art editor for Psychological Perspectives. She serves on the board of the Sam Francis Foundation and was assistant editor of Cobalt Blue: Writings from the Papers of Sam Francis. Her art and silver work have been exhibited nationally in multiple venues over the years, most recently at the Weyrich Gallery in Albuquerque, NM.
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Pub Date : 2023-04-03DOI: 10.1080/00332925.2023.2242058
Dennis Patrick Slattery
"Book Review." Psychological Perspectives, 66(2), pp. 304–305 Additional informationNotes on contributorsDennis Patrick SlatteryDennis Patrick Slattery, PhD, is Distinguished Professor Emeritus in Mythological Studies at Pacifica Graduate Institute in Carpinteria, California, where he has taught in four other programs during his 27 years as faculty. He is the author, coauthor, editor, or coeditor of 33 books and over 200 articles. He offers courses online and in person on “Exploring One’s Personal Myth,” “Dante’s Divine Comedy as Awakening to the Individuation Process,” “The Nature of Stories Through Homer’s Odyssey,” and “The Mythology of Belief.” He has also written the book The Way of Myth: Stories’ Subtle Wisdom, and his most recently published book is The Fictions in Our Convictions: Essays on the Cultural Imagination.
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Pub Date : 2023-04-03DOI: 10.1080/00332925.2023.2242059
Dennis Patrick Slattery
Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Additional informationNotes on contributorsDennis Patrick SlatteryDennis Patrick Slattery, PhD, is Distinguished Professor Emeritus in Mythological Studies at Pacifica Graduate Institute in Carpinteria, California, where he has taught in four other programs during his 27 years as faculty. He is the author, coauthor, editor, or coeditor of 33 books and over 200 articles. He offers courses online and in person on “Exploring One’s Personal Myth,” “Dante’s Divine Comedy as Awakening to the Individuation Process,” “The Nature of Stories Through Homer’s Odyssey,” and “The Mythology of Belief.” He has also written the book The Way of Myth: Stories’ Subtle Wisdom, and his most recently published book is The Fictions in Our Convictions: Essays on the Cultural Imagination.
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