Work in Progress: The Cambridge Companion to Jung
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- Last Updated: Sunday, 27 October 2013 20:37
- Written by Dolores E. Brien
An interview with Polly Young-Eisendrath by Dolores E. Brien
An interview with Polly Young-Eisendrath by Dolores E. Brien
Being a Jungian analyst at this time in history is not particularly comfortable in most psychological or intellectual circles.
The murder of a princess is an event that looms large in the world of myth, which is itself a larger-than-life world.
As I look back over my long relationship with Carl Jung and his ideas, beginning in 1969 when I read Erich Neumann's The Great Mother as a college senior writing an honors thesis on the image of the Virgin in the Middle Ages, I am struck by one theme: transference.
Alchemy is a term that is currently appearing with regularity in all sort of areas - revived and used anywhere and everywhere from the marketing speak of a computer corporation using "alchemy" lazily to describe a vague notion of combining art and science, to the use of the term in a more scientific context referring to the latest possibilities offered by nanotechnologies in the manipulation of elements.