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Chiron Publications Black Friday Sale Special Sale Prices on the following Chiron Favorites: |
| Facing the Dragon Paperback Original Price $19.99 On Sale for $9.99 Structured around a series of lectures presented at the Jung Institute of Chicago in a program entitled “Jungian Psychology and Human Spirituality: Liberation from Tribalism in Religious Life,” this book-length essay attacks the related problems of human evil, spiritual narcissism, secularism and ritual, and grandiosity. Robert Moore dares to insist that we stop ignoring these issues and provides clear-sighted guidance for where to start and what to expect. Along the way, he pulls together many important threads from recent findings in theology, spirituality, and psychology and brings us to a point where we can conceive of embarking on a corrective course.
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| | Rilke – A Soul History Paperback Original Price $35 On Sale for $17.50
Rilke - A Soul History: In the Image of Orpheus tells the inner story of Rilke’s literary career, tracing the mythopoetic journey inscribed in the lines of the poet’s life and art.
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| | Psychotherapy Grounded in the Feminine PrinciplePaperback Original Price $27.95 On Sale for $13.97
This groundbreaking book offers an exciting proposal for approaching therapeutic work from a perspective that emphasizes the feminine principle of holding and containment, while also recognizing a necessary place for the masculine. Sullivan demonstrates the real possibility of an integrated practice with the potential to heal both men and women. |
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Dionysus in Exile Paperback Original Price $19.95 On Sale for $9.97
In this study of the Greek god Dionysus, Lopez-Pedraza offers insight for a cure for the psychological illness of the loss of embodied soulfulness.
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| C.G. Jung: His Friendships with Mary Mellon and J.B. PriestleyPaperback Original Price $12.99 On Sale for $6.50
This story details Jung’s friendships with Mary Mellon and J. B. Priestley, who both admired him and helped make his psychology known and recognized throughout the world. In this book, we get a glimpse of Jung the man, with “nose and ears,” as his son Franz said of him—a remarkable genius but also a man with ordinary human strivings and flaws. |
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