The field of Jungian psychology has grown consistently over the last twenty years, with increasing awareness of its relevance to the issues faced in modern life. This definitive guide demonstrates how Jung’s ideas continue to resonate not only with mental health professionals seeking a more compassionate and creative approach to working with clients, but also with academics across a diverse range of disciplines.
With all new chapters The Second Handbook of Jungian Psychology builds on the strengths of the original Handbook that established it as a classic, while addressing the evolving realities and emerging concerns of the field. Featuring contributions from leading experts, the book offers fascinating insights into key topics, exploring them through the lens of Jung’s foundational theories, subsequent post-Jungian developments, contemporary perspectives, and future possibilities. This important guide to Jungian Psychology has been updated to explore contemporary cultural topics, such as climate change, race, gender and sexuality, and economic inequality.
With its comprehensive approach, this second volume serves as both a guide to the established principles of Jungian psychology and a roadmap for navigating its new frontiers. It is an essential resource for mental health professionals, researchers, and academics, as well as anyone interested in the transformative power and enduring relevance of Jungian thought.
This definitive guide demonstrates how Jung’s ideas continue to resonate not only with mental health professionals seeking a more compassionate and creative approach to working with clients, but also with academics across a diverse range of disciplines.
Part I: Theory
1. After Liber Novus
2. The Shadow, the Other and Their
Shadows
3. Archetype: The Core Concept of Analytical Psychology
4. The Self
5. Jungs Original Theory: The Feeling-Toned Complex as Dissociation
6.
Cultural Complexes in the Cultural Unconscious Part II: Psychotherapy
7.
Interpretation in Jungian Practice
8. The Transference Field in Jungian
Analysis
9. Therapeutic Work with Dreams in Analytical Psychology
10. The
Body in Analytical Psychology: Sensory-Affective Phenomena in Theory and
Practice
11. Active Imagination as Agent of Transformation Part III:
Applications
12. Spirituality: A Jungian Approach
13. Psyche and Social
Inequality
14. Journey to the Interior: Jung and Colonialism
15. Jung and the
Racial Psyche
16. Recasting the Frame of Gender and Sexuality in Jungian
Psychology
17. Jung, Ecopsychology and Climate Change
18. Film After
Jung/Jung After Film: Three Provocations
Renos K. Papadopoulos is Professor of Analytical Psychology, Founder Director of the Centre for Trauma, Asylum and Refugees and of the MA /PhD Programmes in Refugee Care at the University of Essex, UK, as well as Honorary Clinical Psychologist at the Tavistock Clinic. He is a practitioner, trainer, and supervisor Clinical Psychologist, Jungian Psychoanalyst, and Systemic Family Psychotherapist.
Stephen Garratt is a Jungian analyst and a member of the Association of Jungian Analysts (AJA). His practice spans London, Europe, and Asia. He is currently Editor-in-Chief of Jungian Directory, an online resource connecting individuals worldwide with the Jungian community, and he is currently serving on the Executive Committee of the IAAP.