C.G. Jung Society, Seattle
As long as the animals are there, there is life in the symbol.
C.G. Jung
Lecture: Friday, March 14, 2003, 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Trinity Church, Eighth and James, Seattle (note location)
$10 members, $15 nonmembers
In the opening years of our new century and under the shadow of terrorist attacks on American soil, these following questions have become urgent: What makes for our sense of aliveness and feeling real? What puts us in touch with our own voice? What confers a sense of finding and creating a path that is true for us? What kills it, making us feel deadness? The focus of this lecture will examine the space of aliveness, which is created between analysand and analyst, between ego and animus/anima, in worship between ritual and repetition compulsion, and in imagination between the factual and the symbolic.
Workshop: Saturday, March 15, 2003, 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Trinity Church, Eighth and James, Seattle (note location)
$30 members, $40 nonmembers, $25 student/senior members, $35 student/senior nonmembers
To learn about preregistering for the workshop, see Preregistration Policy and Form.
To feel alive and not dead is as basic as our need for food, air, and water. Fear of this lies at the root of illness. In this workshop we will explore the unconscious ways we make parts of ourselves dead and what spaces offer themselves for regeneration.
Ann Belford Ulanov, M.Div., Ph.D., L.H.D., is the Christiane Brooks Johnson Professor of Psychiatry and Religion at the Union Theological Seminary, a psychoanalyst in private practice, and a supervising analyst and faculty member of the C.G. Jung Society, New York City. With her late husband, Barry Ulanov, she is the author of Religion and the Unconscious, Primary Speech: A Psychology of Prayer; Cinderella and Her Sisters: The Envied and the Envying; The Witch and the Clown: Two Archetypes of Human Sexuality; The Healing Imagination; Transforming Sexuality: The Archetypal World of Anima and Animus. She is also the author of The Feminine in Christian Theology and in Jungian Psychology; Receiving Woman: Studies in Psychology and the Theology of the Feminine; Picturing God; The Wisdom of the Psyche; The Female Ancestors of Christ; The Wizard's Gate; The Functioning Transcendent; Religion and the Spiritual in Carl Jung; Finding Space: Winnicott, God, and Psychic Reality; and Attacked by Poison Ivy: A Psychological Study.
Ann Belford Ulanov is the recipient of an honorary doctorate from Virginia Theological School, honorary doctorate from Loyola Graduate Department in Pastoral Counseling, the Distinguished Alumna Award from the Blanton/Peale Institute, the Vision Award from the National Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis, the Oskar Pfister Award from the American Psychiatric Association for Distinguished Work in Depth Psychology and Religion, the Distinguished Contribution Award from the American Association of Pastoral Counselors for Distinguished Work in Depth Psychology and Religion, and the Gradiva Award for best book in Psychiatry and Religion 2002 from the National Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis, for Finding Space: Winnicott, God, and Psychic Reality.
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Updated: 21 January 2003
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