| A Major Website Upgrade for the Asheville Jung Center
|
| We deeply appreciate your support of the Asheville Jung center over its 10 year history. We are excited to announce a major upgrade to our website at www.AshevilleJungCenter.org. It is more user friendly and allows easy browsing of our various seminar products. We now have 10 years of seminars to look through! The purchasing options are more streamlined, easier to obtain the product after purchase and should allow us to handle customer support much more effectively than in the past.
To celebrate the update we are offering you a 20% discount on our entire site, valid for the next 15 days. Your coupon code is JUNGFLIX2017 and can be applied at checkout.
|
| |
Neumann at Eranos Recorded Video Available Featuring Riccardo Bernardini, Erel Shalit Ph.D., & Murray Stein Ph.D.
|
|
The fifth and final seminar of the Erich Neumann series was held in June and Dr. Bernardini gave an incredible presentation on the history of Neuman and Jung at Eranos. Between 1948 and 1960, Neumann lectured annually at the Eranos Conferences. The papers he delivered at Eranos are among his most brilliant works. Scientific Secretary of the Eranos Foundation, Riccardo Bernardini, offered an overview of these works and included many photographs taken at the Eranos Conferences during Neumann’s time. Watch the Trailer to see several of the pictures.
The
full course of this series consist of 5 webinars discussing the works of
Erich Neumann as well as the relationship he shared with Jung.
Participants may register for the full series of lectures for one price
of $127. Participants joining anytime after the course begins can still
register and catch up by watching the recorded version of prior
lectures. Visit the registration page to view the free first webinar or to register for the full series.
Erich Neumann has been widely considered to be Jung's most brilliant student
and heir to the mantle of leadership among analytical psychologists
until his untimely death in 1960 at the age of fifty-five. Many of his
works are considered classics in the field to the present day - The Origins and History of Consciousness and The Great Mother, to name just the best known among many others. Now with the publication of the correspondence between Neumann and Jung (Analytical Psychology in Exile,
Princeton University Press, 2015) and of the substantial papers
presented at the conference held at Kibbutz Shefayim in Israel honoring
the publication of the correspondence (Troubled Times, Creative Minds,
Chiron 2016), a great deal of new interest is developing in the life
and works of Neumann. The five-part webinar Series will be devoted to
exploring the important relationship between Neumann and Jung and
discussing Neumann's works in many areas, clinical and cultural, from
the perspective of analytical psychology. The aim of this Series is to
contribute to the momentum of growing interest in the full range of
Neumann's writings.
|
| | | Join JUNGFLIX for just $7.99/month to receive unlimited streaming access to our complete collection of recorded seminars and events. The entire Asheville Jung Center library is available for viewing with the sole exception of seminars released within the last 180 days.
Your account access lets you stream all available videos to your computer or internet connected device of any kind. Now you can watch all the talks on the go, streaming informative and captivating seminars directly to your mobile device. |
| | 2017 Zürich Lecture Series The Stories We Are: The Value of Abuse and Wrongdoings in our Past
|
| | October 27 & 28, Zurich, Switzerland Featuring Allan Guggenbühl, John Hill, Paul Brutsche, Kathrin Asper, Ursula Wirtz, Murray Stein, Doris Lier, Bernard Sartorius, and Penelope Yungblut
In this year’s Zurich Lecture Series, Allan Guggenbühl will talk about the stories we create from our personal life experiences, and how our basic identity can be built on these stories. Neglected child, smart Underdog, lonesome Hero… these often dramatic, tragic and heroic dramas serve as the base of our identity. They might empower us to cope with challenges and confront the future. Often they hinder us, though, to develop our potential and are the source of our fears and worries. The snag is: The stories of our personal life don’t necessary reflect what actually happened. They often consist of fictional elements that contain an archetypical core. In order to reconcile with the paradoxes, absurdities and mysteries of our lives, we need to find our story line. For this, imagination is important. Discovering and retelling our personal story will help us to become focused and find meaning in our endeavors. In this lecture (and subsequent book), the distinct features of these stories are described, as well as the role of imagination and the possibilities of Mythodrama to work and reflect on the stories we are.
|
| | Allan Guggenbühl, PhD is
a graduate of the C.G. Jung Institute Zürich, the founder of the
Institute for Conflict Management and Mythodrama (IKM), a professor at
the University of Education Zürich, a faculty member of ISAP-ZURICH, and
an analyst in private practice. He is well known for his crisis
intervention management in schools and other institutions. His lectures
at home and abroad focus on this subject and on conflict prevention,
team building, adolescent development, and the topic of boys in school
and men in professional practice. He has authored many books on these
subjects. |
| | Zunfthaus zur Schmiden Marktgasse 20, 8001 Zurich
The opening lecture and dinner on Friday, October 27 will be held at the “Zunfthaus zur Schmiden” (Guild House for Blacksmiths), a beautiful city palace located since 1412 at “Marktgasse 20, close to the Limmat River in the heart of old Zurich. The sumptuous late- Gothic Guildhall and the historic rooms with style, warm hospitality and tradition will make you feel welcome. It is a special privilege to celebrate the Zurich Lecture Series at this grand location. |
| Lavatersaal at St.Peter’s Church St. Peter-Hofstatt 6, 8001 Zurich
More lectures will follow on Saturday, October 28 at the Lavatersaal located at St. Peter’s Church. The Lavatersaal is in a classic 18th century building that belongs to St. Peter’s Church, which boasts the largest clock face in Europe. The house is named after Johann Kaspar Lavater (1741-1801), a good friend of Goethe’s and whom Goethe visited several times at this location. |
|
|
| | Cruelty to Others with Lionel Corbett
|
| Deliberate, gratuitous cruelty to others causes enormous suffering. We constantly hear of such cruelty in the form of torture, tyranny, imprisonment, bombings, and similar behavior, not to mention interpersonal acts of cruelty such as belittling others, teasing, bullying, racial prejudice, betrayal, and the like. This webinar will discuss some of the psychological, biological, and social sources of cruelty.
We will continue with an attempt to understand the psychology of sadism, genocidal behavior, and cruelty to animals. Dr. Corbett will then discuss the nature of torture, its psychological and political roots, and its effects on its victims and perpetrators. Finally a discussion of cruelty to oneself, including forms of self-torture such as masochism, self-mutilation, and the issue of self-induced pain found in some ascetic religious practices, religious martyrdom, and the controversial issue of stigmata.
|
| | Dreams that Change our Lives
|
|  | Have you ever awakened from a dream that left you feeling stunned—a dream so vivid or impactful—so unexpected—that it changes your life from that point forward? Imagine you could ask a question of a dream character, or the dream itself, and watch as a profoundly surprising response appears. Suppose you could take action in your dream to eliminate a recurring nightmare, heal a relationship, or even a physical ailment. The 100 dreamers in this book have!
These are what might be called big dreams, stories of life changing guidance, insight and healing; some that reach beyond the senses and even beyond death. They are presented as guideposts along our life’s journey, and introduced by 22 internationally acclaimed experts, psychologists, researchers, and best-selling authors from the International Association for the Study of Dreams (IASD): Deirdre Barrett, Susannah Benson, Kelly Bulkeley, Laurel Clark, Gayle Delaney, Marcia Emery, Patricia Garfield, Robert Gongloff, Bob Haden, Robert Hoss, Ed Kellogg, Stanley Krippner, Justina Lasley, Jacquie E. Lewis, Tallulah Lyons, Wendy Pannier, Alan Siegel, Carlyle Smith, Gregory Scott Sparrow, Jeremy Taylor, Robert Waggoner and Kelly Sullivan Walden. |
|
|