Spring 84 - 2010
God Must Not Die! (Or Must He?): Jung and Christianity
405 pages, ISBN 978-1-935528-08-1
C.G. Jung's psychology of individuation and self is rooted in his interpretation of Christianity. This issue, guest-edited by Greg Mogenson, contains a new article by Wolfgang Giegerich entitled "God Must Not Die! C.G. Jung's Analysis of the One-Sidedness of Christianity," followed by several in-depth reactions to it. Topics addressed include the telos of Christianity, the theology/psychology difference, the reality of evil question, and the kenosis dynamic central to the Christian message and its relation to the end of theism.
This volume also contains a separate section called Romanyshyn and Giegerich: Poles Apart comprised of critical rejoinders to another earlier article by Giegerich published in Spring's fall 2009 issue and entitled "The Psychologist as Repentance Preacher and Revivalist/Robert Romanyshyn on the Melting Polar Ice."
An interview with Margaret Wilkinson by Daniela Sieff, "Neurobiology in the Consulting Room," is also included as well as a number of book reviews.
TABLE OF CONTENTS | |
Jung and Christianity: A Critique by Giegerich with Responses | |
Guest Editor's Introduction | Greg Mogenson |
God Must Not Die! C.G. Jung's Thesis of the One-Sidedness of Christianity | Wolfgang Giegerich |
"...until God's absence helps!" | David Miller |
The Vicissitudes of Spirit in Jung's Psychology: A Response to Giegerich's "God Must Not Die!" | Michael Whan |
God, Man and Evil in Jung's Thought: Complementary Remarks to Wolfgang Giegerich's Critique | Marco Heleno Barreto |
Etwas geschah: Orphaned Event and its Adoptions | John Peck |
The Ambiguity of Evil and the God of the Depths: A Response to Giegerich's "God Must Not Die!" | John Haule |
No As If, No Between: The Giegerich Inversion of Mind and Soul | Glen Slater |
Jungian Analysis Post Mortem Dei | Greg Mogenson |
Romanyshyn & Giegerich: Poles Apart Rejoinders to Giegerich's Critique of Romanyshyn's "The Melting of the Polar Ice" | |
Who is Wolfgang Giegerich? | Robert Romanyshyn |
Robert Romanyshyn and Wolfgang Giegerich: Poles Apart | Susan Rowland |
Response to Wolfgang Giegerich's "The Psychologist as Repentance Preacher and Revivalist: Robert Romanyshyn on the Melting of the Polar Ice" | Joel Weishaus |
Response to Wolfgang Giegerich's "The Psychologist as Repentance Preacher and Revivalist: Robert Romanyshyn on the Melting of the Polar Ice" | David H. Rosen |
Interview | |
Neurobiology in the Consulting Room: An Interview with Margaret Wilkinson | Daniela Sieff |
Book Reviews | |
Synchronicity: Nature and Psyche in an Interconnected Universe by Joseph Cambray | F. David Peat |
Analytical Psychology and German Classical Aesthetics: Goethe, Schiller, and Jung, Vol. 1, The Development of the Personality and Vol. 2, The Constellation of the Self by Paul Bishop | David Tacey |
The Sungod's Journey through the Netherworld: Reading the Ancient Egyptian Amduat by Andreas Schweizer | Murray Stein |
Possession: Jung's Comparative Anatomy of the Psyche by Craig E. Stephenson | Jean Kirsch |
Perpetual Adolescence: Jungian Analyses of American Media, Literature, and Pop Culture, Sally Porterfield, Keith Polette, and Tita French Baumlin, editors | Blake Burleson |
Tim Burton: The Monster and the Crowd: A Post-Jungian Perspective by Helena Bassil-Morozow | Terrie Waddell |
Daimon distributes the Spring Journal only outside America.
On the American continent please order directly from: www.springjournalandbooks.com.
Spring Journal
Spring 84 - 2010 - God Must Not Die!
- ISBN: 9781935528081
- Availability: In Stock
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23.40€