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| Upcoming Events
Becoming Me: Why Does It Have to Be So Difficult?
3 Sessions - July 1 - 15 Sponsored by Olympic College Online
Join Stephen Rowley, author of The Lost Coin, for this course—a discussion of the most common, yet difficult challenges many of us experience over time as we learn to become our true selves.
Session 1: Learning From Everyday Trauma (individuation)
Session 2: Surviving Midlife Crisis (transiting the dark night of the soul)
Session 3: Discovering Your Pathway and Purpose (reclaiming personal authority)
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Receive a 10% Discount for
Ecopoetics and Environmental Artivism a Transdisciplinary Conference
July 11: In person participation & online July 12: Fully online
Featuring Susan Rowland & JLM Morton as keynote speakers
Presented by The London Arts-Based Research Centre
The London Arts-Based Research Centre invites you to the upcoming Eco-Poetics and Environmental Artivism conference. All registrants using the unique code Chiron10 will receive 10% off registration.
Ecopoetics, as well as other types of environmental artivism, attempts to locate us—humans—in the world, with the intention of focusing on ecology (from Greek oikos, or “home” and logos, or “reason”). So environmental aesthetics contemplate the way we exist within this oikos and how this “home” is perceived; they also navigate the borders between human and non-human nature, and how images, places, spaces and memories assist our desire to explore the self in the world. Ecopoetry and environmental artivism in general, therefore, view humanity’s relationship with the planet, instead of merely focusing on the unfolding scenes of nature through different modes of art; thus, they highlight the complexities of our interrelationships within and our responsibilities toward our environment.
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| | Chiron Books by Susan Rowland The Mary Wandwalker Series
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| | | | | June Book Spotlight
A Mystical Path Less Traveled: A Jungian Psychological Perspective – Journal Notes, Poems, Dreams, and Blessings
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| | | New Releases
Sanctuary: The Inner Life of Home
“This anthology explores our longing for sanctuary and the mythology of home from many viewpoints—a treasure trove of storytelling.” Jean Shinoda Bolen, M.D. If you want to get to know someone, listen to their story of home. Intimacy builds as we ask: Where do you come from? What did you leave behind? Where do you feel safe? In Sanctuary, these questions are explored by Jungian analysts, architects and historians, scientists, and storytellers. Contributors also consider how climate change, Black Lives Matter, and an unprecedented wave of global refugees are impacting our notions of home and hospitality. |
| | | Jung and the Epic of Transformation
Volume 1, Wolfram von Eschenbach’s “Parzival” and the Grail as Transformation
This is the first volume in a series of books, examining key texts in German literature and thought that were, in Jung’s own estimation or by scholarly consent, highly influential on his thinking. The project of Jung and the Epic of Transformation consists of four titles, sequentially arranged to explore great works from a Jungian perspective and in turn to highlight their importance for interpreting The Red Book.
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| | | Coming Soon
Slender Threads: A Conversation with Robert A. Johnson
In spite of Robert Johnson’s fascinating and accomplished life, he rarely sat for interviews. In 2002, Pittman McGehee, Jr. gathered a film crew of talented friends to film his father, Episcopal priest and Jungian analyst, J. Pittman McGehee, Sr. to interview Robert over the course of two days. The resulting film, Slender Threads, is a long ranging interview covering many topics relevant to today’s world and has garnered quite an online following over the past 20 years. This book, Slender Threads, is based on the transcript of the interview, and includes an introduction by Pittman McGehee, Jr., Ph.D. as well as the original introduction to the film by J. Pittman McGehee, Sr. D.D. |
| | | Varieties of Nothingness
This book explores the many and diverse ways in which nothingness is weaved into the fabric of our existence. While these essays are indeed wide ranging and eclectic, they share one theme in common: nothingness is not nothing.
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| | C.G. Jung: Face to Face with Christianity - Conversations on Dreaming the Myth Onward
Releasing August 19 - Pre-order Today!
These in-depth conversations with leading Jungian analysts and scholars—including Murray Stein, Ann Lammers, Paul Bishop, and David Tacey—explore C.G. Jung's lifelong wrestling with Christianity and its importance for us today. Can analytical psychology be understood as Jung's attempt to recover a genuine experience of being Christian? If so, was it successful?
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| | | | Download the Chiron Catalog for a Complete Listing of Titles
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