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Archetypal psychology

Archetypal psychology was initiated as a distinct movement in the early 1970s by James Hillman, a psychologist who trained in analytical psychology and became the first Director of the Jung Institute in Zurich. Hillman reports that archetypal psychology emerged partly from the Jungian tradition whilst drawing also from other traditions and authorities such as Henry Corbin, Giambattista Vico, and Plotinus.

Archetypal psychology relativizes and deliteralizes the notion of ego and focuses on what it calls the psyche, or soul, and the deepest patterns of psychic functioning, "the fundamental fantasies that animate all life" (Moore, in Hillman, 1991). Archetypal psychology likens itself to a polytheistic mythology in that it attempts to recognize the myriad fantasies and myths – gods, goddesses, demigods, mortals and animals – that shape and are shaped by our psychological lives. In this framework the ego is but one psychological fantasy within an assemblage of fantasies. Archetypal psychology is, along with the classical and developmental schools, one of the three schools of post-Jungian psychology outlined by Andrew Samuels (see Samuels, 1995).

Influences edit

The main influence on the development of archetypal psychology is Carl Jung's analytical psychology. It is strongly influenced by Classical Greek, Renaissance, and Romantic ideas and thought. Influential artists, poets, philosophers and psychologists include Nietzsche, Henry Corbin, Keats, Shelley, Petrarch, and Paracelsus. Though all different in their theories and psychologies, they appear to be unified by their common concern for the psyche – the soul.

C. G. Jung edit

Carl Gustav Jung was a Swiss psychologist who was the first father of archetypal psychology. Jungian archetypes are thought patterns that find worldwide parallels in individuals or entire cultures. Archai appear in dreams, religions, the arts, and social customs in all people and they manifest impulsively in mental disorders.[1] According to Jung archetypal ideas and patterns reside within the collective unconscious, which is a blueprint inherent in every individual, as opposed to the personal unconscious, which contains a single individual's repressed ideas, desires and memories as described by Freud. What differentiates Jungian psychology from archetypal psychology is that Jung believed archetypes are cultural, anthropological, and transcend the empirical world of time and place, and are not observable through experience (e.g., phenomenal). On the contrary, Archetypal psychology views archetypes to always be phenomenal.[1]

Henry Corbin edit

Henry Corbin, a French scholar and philosopher, is the second father of archetypal psychology. Corbin created the idea of the existence of the mundus imaginalis which is a distinct field of imaginable realities and offers an ontological mode of location of archetypes of the psyche.[clarification needed] The mundus imaginalis provided an evaluative and cosmic grounding for archetypes. The second contribution Corbin made to the field was the idea that archetypes are accessible to imagination and first present themselves as images, so the procedure of archetypal psychology must be rhetorical and poetic, without logical reasoning, and the goal in therapy should be to restore the patient's imaginable realities. Therefore, the goal of therapy is the middle ground of psychic realities, a development of a sense of soul. Also, according to Corbin, the method of therapy is the cultivation of imagination.[1]

Edward Casey edit

Edward S. Casey is attributed with distinguishing archetypal psychology from other theories by explaining an image as a way of seeing rather than something seen. According to Casey, an image is only perceived by imagining because an image is not what one sees but the way one sees. He also states that imagination is an activity of soul and not just a human faculty. An image appears to be more profound, more powerful, and more beautiful than the comprehension of it. This explains the drive behind the arts which provide disciplines that can actualize the complexity of the image.[1]

James Hillman edit

Hillman (1975) sketches a brief lineage of archetypal psychology.

By calling upon Jung to begin with, I am partly acknowledging the fundamental debt that archetypal psychology owes him. He is the immediate ancestor in a long line that stretches back through Freud, Dilthey, Coleridge, Schelling, Vico, Ficino, Plotinus, and Plato to Heraclitus – and with even more branches yet to be traced (p. xvii).

Polytheistic psychology edit

Thomas Moore says of James Hillman's teaching that he "portrays the psyche as inherently multiple".[2] In Hillman's archetypal/polytheistic view, the psyche or soul has many directions and sources of meaning – and this can feel like an ongoing state of conflict – a struggle with one's daimones. According to Hillman, "polytheistic psychology can give sacred differentiation to our psychic turmoil...."[3] Hillman states that

The power of myth, its reality, resides precisely in its power to seize and influence psychic life. The Greeks knew this so well, and so they had no depth psychology and psychopathology such as we have. They had myths. And we have no myths – instead, depth psychology and psychopathology. Therefore... psychology shows myths in modern dress and myths show our depth psychology in ancient dress."[4]

Hillman qualifies his many references to gods as differing from a literalistic approach saying that for him they are aides memoires, i.e. sounding boards employed "for echoing life today or as bass chords giving resonance to the little melodies of life."[5] Hillman further insists that he does not view the pantheon of gods as a 'master matrix' against which we should measure today and thereby decry modern loss of richness.[5]

Psyche or soul edit

Hillman says he has been critical of the 20th century's psychologies (e.g., biological psychology, behaviorism, cognitive psychology) that have adopted a natural scientific philosophy and praxis. His main criticisms include that they are reductive, materialistic, and literal; they are psychologies without psyche, without soul. Accordingly, Hillman's oeuvre has been an attempt to restore psyche to its proper place in psychology. Hillman sees the soul at work in imagination, fantasy, myth and metaphor. He also sees soul revealed in psychopathology, in the symptoms of psychological disorders. Psyche-pathos-logos is the "speech of the suffering soul" or the soul's suffering of meaning. A great portion of Hillman's thought attempts to attend to the speech of the soul as it is revealed via images and fantasies.

Hillman has his own definition of soul. Primarily, he notes that soul is not a "thing", not an entity. Nor is it something that is located "inside" a person. Rather, soul is "a perspective rather than a substance, a viewpoint towards things... (it is) reflective; it mediates events and makes differences..."(1975). Soul is not to be located in the brain or in the head, for example (where most modern psychologies place it), but human beings are in psyche. The world, in turn, is the anima mundi, or the world ensouled. Hillman often quotes a phrase coined by the Romantic poet John Keats: "call the world the vale of soul-making."

Additionally, Hillman (1975) says he observes that soul:

refers to the deepening of events into experiences; second the significance of soul makes possible, whether in love or religious concern, derives from its special relationship with death. And third, by 'soul' I mean the imaginative possibility in our natures, the experiencing through reflective speculation, dream, image, fantasy—that mode which recognizes all realities as primarily symbolic or metaphorical.

The notion of soul as imaginative possibility, in relation to the archai or root metaphors, is what Hillman has termed the "poetic basis of mind".

Dream analysis edit

Because Hillman's archetypal psychology is concerned with fantasy, myth, and image, dreams are considered to be significant in relation to the soul. Hillman does not believe that dreams are simply random residue or flotsam from waking life (as advanced by physiologists), but neither does he believe that dreams are compensatory for the struggles of waking life, or are invested with "secret" meanings of how one should live (à la Jung). Rather, "dreams tell us where we are, not what to do" (1979). Therefore, Hillman is against the 20th century traditional interpretive methods of dream analysis. Hillman's approach is phenomenological rather than analytic (which breaks the dream down into its constituent parts) and interpretive/hermeneutic (which may make a dream image "something other" than what it appears to be in the dream). His dictum with regard to dream content and process is "Stick with the image."

Hillman (1983) describes his position succinctly:

For instance, a black snake comes in a dream, a great big black snake, and you can spend a whole hour with this black snake talking about the devouring mother, talking about anxiety, talking about the repressed sexuality, talking about the natural mind, all those interpretive moves that people make, and what is left, what is vitally important, is what this snake is doing, this crawling huge black snake that's walking into your life... and the moment you've defined the snake, you've interpreted it, you've lost the snake, you've stopped it.... The task of analysis is to keep the snake there....

The snake in the dream does not become something else: it is none of the things Hillman mentioned, and neither is it a penis, as Hillman says Freud might have maintained, nor the serpent from the Garden of Eden, as Hillman thinks Jung might have mentioned. It is not something someone can look up in a dream dictionary; its meaning has not been given in advance. Rather, the black snake is the black snake. Approaching the dream snake phenomenologically simply means describing the snake and attending to how the snake appears as a snake in the dream. It is a huge black snake, that is given. But are there other snakes in the dream? If so, is it bigger than the other snakes? Smaller? Is it a black snake among green snakes? Or is it alone? What is the setting, a desert or a rain forest? Is the snake getting ready to feed? Shedding its skin? Sunning itself on a rock? All of these questions are elicited from the primary image of the snake in the dream, and as such can be rich material revealing the psychological life of the dreamer and the life of the psyche spoken through the dream.

The Soul's Code edit

Hillman's 1996 book, The Soul's Code: In Search of Character and Calling, outlines an "acorn theory of the soul".[6] His theory states that each individual holds the potential for their unique possibilities inside themselves already, much as an acorn holds the pattern for an oak, invisible within itself. It argues against the parental fallacy whereby our parents are seen as crucial in determining who we are by supplying us with genetic material and behavioral patterns. Instead the book suggests for a reconnection with what is invisible within us, our daimon or soul or acorn and the acorn's calling to the wider world of nature. It argues against theories which attempt to map life into phases, suggesting that this is counter-productive and makes people feel like they are failing to live up to what is normal. This in turn produces a truncated, normalized society of soulless mediocrity where evil is not allowed but injustice is everywhere – a society that cannot tolerate eccentricity or the further reaches of life experiences but sees them as illnesses to be medicated out of existence.

Hillman diverges from Jung and his idea of the Self. Hillman sees Jung as too prescriptive and argues against the idea of life-maps by which to try to grow properly.

Instead, Hillman suggests a reappraisal of each individual's childhood and present life to try to find the individual's particular calling, the acorn of the soul. He has written that he is the one to help precipitate a re-souling of the world in the space between rationality and psychology. He replaces the notion of growing up, with the myth of growing down from the womb into a messy, confusing earthy world. Hillman rejects formal logic in favour of reference to case histories of well known people and considers his arguments to be in line with the puer aeternus or eternal youth whose brief burning existence could be seen in the work of romantic poets like Keats and Byron and in recently deceased young rock stars like Jeff Buckley or Kurt Cobain. Hillman also rejects causality as a defining framework and suggests in its place a shifting form of fate whereby events are not inevitable but bound to be expressed in some way dependent on the character of the soul or acorn in question.

Psychopathology and therapy edit

Psychopathology is viewed as the psyche's independent ability to create morbidity, disorder, illness, abnormality and suffering in any part of its behavior and to imagine and experience life through a deformed perspective.[7]

Archetypal psychology follows the following procedures for therapy:

  • Regular meetings
  • Face-to-face
  • The therapist chooses the location
  • A fee is charged

These procedures may be modified depending on the therapist and the client. In therapy both the therapist and client explore the client's habitual behavior, feelings, fantasies, dreams, memories, and ideas. The goal of therapy is the improvement of the client and termination of treatment.[8] Goals are not stated for therapy.[1]

Influence edit

Hillman's archetypal or imaginal psychology influenced a number of younger analysts and colleagues, among the most well known being Thomas Moore (spiritual writer) and Jungian analyst Stanton Marlan. A brief history of the early influence of Hillman and of archetypal/imaginal psychology can be found in Marlan's Archetypal Psychologies.[9]

Criticism edit

See James Hillman: Criticism

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Hillman, J. (1985). Archetypal psychology a brief account. Dallas, TX: Spring Publications
  2. ^ Hillman, James (1989). Thomas Moore (ed.). A blue fire: Selected writings by James Hillman. New York: Harper Collins. pp. 36. ISBN 0-06-092101-3.
  3. ^ Hillman, James (1989). Thomas Moore (ed.). A blue fire: Selected writings by James Hillman. New York: Harper Collins. pp. 41. ISBN 0-06-092101-3.
  4. ^ Hillman, J. (1990) Oedipus Variations: Studies in Literature and Psychoanalysis. Spring p.90
  5. ^ a b SPRING Journal 56, p.5 (1994) Spring Publications
  6. ^ Birkerts, Sven (15 September 1996). "From Little Acorns...: The Soul's Code: In Search of Character and Calling. By James Hillman". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  7. ^ Hillman, James. Re-Visioning Psychology. New York: Harper & Row, 1975 [Harper Colophon edition, 1977].
  8. ^ Hillman, James. Loose Ends: Primary Papers in Archetypal Psychology. New York/Zurich: Spring Publications, 1975.
  9. ^ Marlan, S. (ed.) (2008) Archetypal Psychologies: Reflections in honor of James Hillman. New Orleans: Spring Journal Books.

Select bibliography edit

Other writers edit

  • Moore, Thomas (1990). The Planets Within. SteinerBooks. ISBN 0-940262-28-2.
  • Moore, Thomas (1994). Dark Eros. Spring Publications. ISBN 0-88214-365-4.
  • Dennis, Sandra Lee (2001). Embrace of the Daimon. Nicolas-Hays. ISBN 0-89254-056-7.
  • Paris, Ginnette (1990). Pagan Grace: Dionysos, Hermes, and Goddess Memory in Daily Life. Spring Publications. ISBN 0-88214-342-5.
  • Paris, Ginnette (1986). Pagan Meditations: The Worlds of Aphrodite, Artemis, and Hestia. Spring Publications. ISBN 0-88214-330-1.
  • The Power of Soul, Robert Sardello
  • Ziegler, Alfred (2000). Archetypal Madicine. Spring Publications. ISBN 0-88214-374-3.
  • Clift, Jean Dalby; Wallace Clift (1996). The Archetype of Pilgrimage: Outer Action with Inner Meaning. Paulist Press. ISBN 0-8091-3599-X.
  • Miller, David L. (2005). Christs. Spring Journal. ISBN 1-882670-93-0.
  • Hells and Holy Ghosts, David L. Miller
  • Echo's Subtle Body, Patricia Berry 1982
  • The Soul in Grief, Robert Romanyshyn
  • Technology as Symptom and Dream, Robert Romanyshyn, 1989
  • Mirror and Metaphor: Images and Stories of Psychological Life, Robert Romanyshyn, 2001
  • Waking Dreams, Mary Watkins
  • The Alchemy of Discourse, Paul Kugler
  • Words As Eggs: Psyche in Language and Clinic, by Russell Arthur Lockhart
  • The Moon and The Virgin, Nor Hall
  • The Academy of the Dead, Stephen Simmer
  • Svet Zhizni (Light of Life) (in Russian), Alexander Zelitchenko, 2006
  • Samuels, A. (1995). Jung and the Post-Jungians. London: Routledge.
  • Daniels, Aaron (2011). Imaginal Reality, Volume 1: Journey to the Voids. Aeon Books. ISBN 978-1-90465-849-8.
  • Daniels, Aaron (2011). Imaginal Reality, Volume 2: Voidcraft. Aeon Books. ISBN 978-1-90465-856-6.

External links edit

  • The Archetypal Mind
  • Spring Publications website
  • Brent Dean Robbins' James Hillman webpage
  • Jungian Archetypes
  • Pacifica Graduate Institute – Graduate school offering programs in Jungian and post-Jungian studies
  • – A journal for Archetypal studies and the arts

archetypal, psychology, initiated, distinct, movement, early, 1970s, james, hillman, psychologist, trained, analytical, psychology, became, first, director, jung, institute, zurich, hillman, reports, that, archetypal, psychology, emerged, partly, from, jungian. Archetypal psychology was initiated as a distinct movement in the early 1970s by James Hillman a psychologist who trained in analytical psychology and became the first Director of the Jung Institute in Zurich Hillman reports that archetypal psychology emerged partly from the Jungian tradition whilst drawing also from other traditions and authorities such as Henry Corbin Giambattista Vico and Plotinus Archetypal psychology relativizes and deliteralizes the notion of ego and focuses on what it calls the psyche or soul and the deepest patterns of psychic functioning the fundamental fantasies that animate all life Moore in Hillman 1991 Archetypal psychology likens itself to a polytheistic mythology in that it attempts to recognize the myriad fantasies and myths gods goddesses demigods mortals and animals that shape and are shaped by our psychological lives In this framework the ego is but one psychological fantasy within an assemblage of fantasies Archetypal psychology is along with the classical and developmental schools one of the three schools of post Jungian psychology outlined by Andrew Samuels see Samuels 1995 Contents 1 Influences 2 C G Jung 3 Henry Corbin 4 Edward Casey 5 James Hillman 5 1 Polytheistic psychology 5 2 Psyche or soul 5 3 Dream analysis 5 4 The Soul s Code 6 Psychopathology and therapy 7 Influence 8 Criticism 9 See also 10 References 11 Select bibliography 11 1 Other writers 12 External linksInfluences editThe main influence on the development of archetypal psychology is Carl Jung s analytical psychology It is strongly influenced by Classical Greek Renaissance and Romantic ideas and thought Influential artists poets philosophers and psychologists include Nietzsche Henry Corbin Keats Shelley Petrarch and Paracelsus Though all different in their theories and psychologies they appear to be unified by their common concern for the psyche the soul C G Jung editCarl Gustav Jung was a Swiss psychologist who was the first father of archetypal psychology Jungian archetypes are thought patterns that find worldwide parallels in individuals or entire cultures Archai appear in dreams religions the arts and social customs in all people and they manifest impulsively in mental disorders 1 According to Jung archetypal ideas and patterns reside within the collective unconscious which is a blueprint inherent in every individual as opposed to the personal unconscious which contains a single individual s repressed ideas desires and memories as described by Freud What differentiates Jungian psychology from archetypal psychology is that Jung believed archetypes are cultural anthropological and transcend the empirical world of time and place and are not observable through experience e g phenomenal On the contrary Archetypal psychology views archetypes to always be phenomenal 1 Henry Corbin editHenry Corbin a French scholar and philosopher is the second father of archetypal psychology Corbin created the idea of the existence of the mundus imaginalis which is a distinct field of imaginable realities and offers an ontological mode of location of archetypes of the psyche clarification needed The mundus imaginalis provided an evaluative and cosmic grounding for archetypes The second contribution Corbin made to the field was the idea that archetypes are accessible to imagination and first present themselves as images so the procedure of archetypal psychology must be rhetorical and poetic without logical reasoning and the goal in therapy should be to restore the patient s imaginable realities Therefore the goal of therapy is the middle ground of psychic realities a development of a sense of soul Also according to Corbin the method of therapy is the cultivation of imagination 1 Edward Casey editEdward S Casey is attributed with distinguishing archetypal psychology from other theories by explaining an image as a way of seeing rather than something seen According to Casey an image is only perceived by imagining because an image is not what one sees but the way one sees He also states that imagination is an activity of soul and not just a human faculty An image appears to be more profound more powerful and more beautiful than the comprehension of it This explains the drive behind the arts which provide disciplines that can actualize the complexity of the image 1 James Hillman editHillman 1975 sketches a brief lineage of archetypal psychology By calling upon Jung to begin with I am partly acknowledging the fundamental debt that archetypal psychology owes him He is the immediate ancestor in a long line that stretches back through Freud Dilthey Coleridge Schelling Vico Ficino Plotinus and Plato to Heraclitus and with even more branches yet to be traced p xvii Polytheistic psychology edit Thomas Moore says of James Hillman s teaching that he portrays the psyche as inherently multiple 2 In Hillman s archetypal polytheistic view the psyche or soul has many directions and sources of meaning and this can feel like an ongoing state of conflict a struggle with one s daimones According to Hillman polytheistic psychology can give sacred differentiation to our psychic turmoil 3 Hillman states that The power of myth its reality resides precisely in its power to seize and influence psychic life The Greeks knew this so well and so they had no depth psychology and psychopathology such as we have They had myths And we have no myths instead depth psychology and psychopathology Therefore psychology shows myths in modern dress and myths show our depth psychology in ancient dress 4 Hillman qualifies his many references to gods as differing from a literalistic approach saying that for him they are aides memoires i e sounding boards employed for echoing life today or as bass chords giving resonance to the little melodies of life 5 Hillman further insists that he does not view the pantheon of gods as a master matrix against which we should measure today and thereby decry modern loss of richness 5 Psyche or soul edit Main articles Psyche psychology and Soul Hillman says he has been critical of the 20th century s psychologies e g biological psychology behaviorism cognitive psychology that have adopted a natural scientific philosophy and praxis His main criticisms include that they are reductive materialistic and literal they are psychologies without psyche without soul Accordingly Hillman s oeuvre has been an attempt to restore psyche to its proper place in psychology Hillman sees the soul at work in imagination fantasy myth and metaphor He also sees soul revealed in psychopathology in the symptoms of psychological disorders Psyche pathos logos is the speech of the suffering soul or the soul s suffering of meaning A great portion of Hillman s thought attempts to attend to the speech of the soul as it is revealed via images and fantasies Hillman has his own definition of soul Primarily he notes that soul is not a thing not an entity Nor is it something that is located inside a person Rather soul is a perspective rather than a substance a viewpoint towards things it is reflective it mediates events and makes differences 1975 Soul is not to be located in the brain or in the head for example where most modern psychologies place it but human beings are in psyche The world in turn is the anima mundi or the world ensouled Hillman often quotes a phrase coined by the Romantic poet John Keats call the world the vale of soul making Additionally Hillman 1975 says he observes that soul refers to the deepening of events into experiences second the significance of soul makes possible whether in love or religious concern derives from its special relationship with death And third by soul I mean the imaginative possibility in our natures the experiencing through reflective speculation dream image fantasy that mode which recognizes all realities as primarily symbolic or metaphorical The notion of soul as imaginative possibility in relation to the archai or root metaphors is what Hillman has termed the poetic basis of mind Dream analysis edit Main article Dream analysis Because Hillman s archetypal psychology is concerned with fantasy myth and image dreams are considered to be significant in relation to the soul Hillman does not believe that dreams are simply random residue or flotsam from waking life as advanced by physiologists but neither does he believe that dreams are compensatory for the struggles of waking life or are invested with secret meanings of how one should live a la Jung Rather dreams tell us where we are not what to do 1979 Therefore Hillman is against the 20th century traditional interpretive methods of dream analysis Hillman s approach is phenomenological rather than analytic which breaks the dream down into its constituent parts and interpretive hermeneutic which may make a dream image something other than what it appears to be in the dream His dictum with regard to dream content and process is Stick with the image Hillman 1983 describes his position succinctly For instance a black snake comes in a dream a great big black snake and you can spend a whole hour with this black snake talking about the devouring mother talking about anxiety talking about the repressed sexuality talking about the natural mind all those interpretive moves that people make and what is left what is vitally important is what this snake is doing this crawling huge black snake that s walking into your life and the moment you ve defined the snake you ve interpreted it you ve lost the snake you ve stopped it The task of analysis is to keep the snake there The snake in the dream does not become something else it is none of the things Hillman mentioned and neither is it a penis as Hillman says Freud might have maintained nor the serpent from the Garden of Eden as Hillman thinks Jung might have mentioned It is not something someone can look up in a dream dictionary its meaning has not been given in advance Rather the black snake is the black snake Approaching the dream snake phenomenologically simply means describing the snake and attending to how the snake appears as a snake in the dream It is a huge black snake that is given But are there other snakes in the dream If so is it bigger than the other snakes Smaller Is it a black snake among green snakes Or is it alone What is the setting a desert or a rain forest Is the snake getting ready to feed Shedding its skin Sunning itself on a rock All of these questions are elicited from the primary image of the snake in the dream and as such can be rich material revealing the psychological life of the dreamer and the life of the psyche spoken through the dream The Soul s Code edit Hillman s 1996 book The Soul s Code In Search of Character and Calling outlines an acorn theory of the soul 6 His theory states that each individual holds the potential for their unique possibilities inside themselves already much as an acorn holds the pattern for an oak invisible within itself It argues against the parental fallacy whereby our parents are seen as crucial in determining who we are by supplying us with genetic material and behavioral patterns Instead the book suggests for a reconnection with what is invisible within us our daimon or soul or acorn and the acorn s calling to the wider world of nature It argues against theories which attempt to map life into phases suggesting that this is counter productive and makes people feel like they are failing to live up to what is normal This in turn produces a truncated normalized society of soulless mediocrity where evil is not allowed but injustice is everywhere a society that cannot tolerate eccentricity or the further reaches of life experiences but sees them as illnesses to be medicated out of existence Hillman diverges from Jung and his idea of the Self Hillman sees Jung as too prescriptive and argues against the idea of life maps by which to try to grow properly Instead Hillman suggests a reappraisal of each individual s childhood and present life to try to find the individual s particular calling the acorn of the soul He has written that he is the one to help precipitate a re souling of the world in the space between rationality and psychology He replaces the notion of growing up with the myth of growing down from the womb into a messy confusing earthy world Hillman rejects formal logic in favour of reference to case histories of well known people and considers his arguments to be in line with the puer aeternus or eternal youth whose brief burning existence could be seen in the work of romantic poets like Keats and Byron and in recently deceased young rock stars like Jeff Buckley or Kurt Cobain Hillman also rejects causality as a defining framework and suggests in its place a shifting form of fate whereby events are not inevitable but bound to be expressed in some way dependent on the character of the soul or acorn in question Psychopathology and therapy editPsychopathology is viewed as the psyche s independent ability to create morbidity disorder illness abnormality and suffering in any part of its behavior and to imagine and experience life through a deformed perspective 7 Archetypal psychology follows the following procedures for therapy Regular meetings Face to face The therapist chooses the location A fee is chargedThese procedures may be modified depending on the therapist and the client In therapy both the therapist and client explore the client s habitual behavior feelings fantasies dreams memories and ideas The goal of therapy is the improvement of the client and termination of treatment 8 Goals are not stated for therapy 1 Influence editHillman s archetypal or imaginal psychology influenced a number of younger analysts and colleagues among the most well known being Thomas Moore spiritual writer and Jungian analyst Stanton Marlan A brief history of the early influence of Hillman and of archetypal imaginal psychology can be found in Marlan s Archetypal Psychologies 9 Criticism editSee James Hillman CriticismSee also edit nbsp Psychology portalArchetypal pedagogy Analytical psychology Polytheistic myth as psychology Psychological astrologyReferences edit a b c d e Hillman J 1985 Archetypal psychology a brief account Dallas TX Spring Publications Hillman James 1989 Thomas Moore ed A blue fire Selected writings by James Hillman New York Harper Collins pp 36 ISBN 0 06 092101 3 Hillman James 1989 Thomas Moore ed A blue fire Selected writings by James Hillman New York Harper Collins pp 41 ISBN 0 06 092101 3 Hillman J 1990 Oedipus Variations Studies in Literature and Psychoanalysis Spring p 90 a b SPRING Journal 56 p 5 1994 Spring Publications Birkerts Sven 15 September 1996 From Little Acorns The Soul s Code In Search of Character and Calling By James Hillman Los Angeles Times Retrieved 1 June 2021 Hillman James Re Visioning Psychology New York Harper amp Row 1975 Harper Colophon edition 1977 Hillman James Loose Ends Primary Papers in Archetypal Psychology New York Zurich Spring Publications 1975 Marlan S ed 2008 Archetypal Psychologies Reflections in honor of James Hillman New Orleans Spring Journal Books Select bibliography editHillman James 2004 A Terrible Love of War Penguin ISBN 1 59420 011 4 Hillman James 1999 The Force of Character Random House ISBN 0 375 50120 7 Hillman James 1998 The Myth of Analysis Three Essays in Archetypal Psychology Northwestern University Press ISBN 0 8101 1651 0 Hillman James 1997 The Soul s Code On Character and Calling Random House ISBN 0 446 67371 4 Hillman James 1995 Kinds of Power A Guide to its Intelligent Uses Currency Doubleday ISBN 0 385 48967 6 Hillman James 1983 Healing Fiction Station Hill Press ISBN 0 930794 55 9 Hillman James Michael Ventura 1993 We ve Had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy And the World s Getting Worse HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 250661 7 Hillman James 1992 The Thought the Heart and the Soul of the World Spring Publications ISBN 0 88214 353 0 Hillman James 1997 Archetypal Psychology A Brief Account Spring Publications ISBN 0 88214 373 5 Hillman James Carl Gustav Jung 1985 Anima An Anatomy of a Personified Notion ISBN 0 88214 316 6 Inter Views with Laura Pozzo 1983 Hillman James 1973 The Dream and the Underworld HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 090682 0 Hillman James 1975 Loose Ends Primary Papers in Archetypal Psychology Spring Publications ISBN 0 88214 308 5 Hillman James 1975 Re Visioning Psychology based on his Yale University Terry Lectures Other writers edit Moore Thomas 1990 The Planets Within SteinerBooks ISBN 0 940262 28 2 Moore Thomas 1994 Dark Eros Spring Publications ISBN 0 88214 365 4 Dennis Sandra Lee 2001 Embrace of the Daimon Nicolas Hays ISBN 0 89254 056 7 Paris Ginnette 1990 Pagan Grace Dionysos Hermes and Goddess Memory in Daily Life Spring Publications ISBN 0 88214 342 5 Paris Ginnette 1986 Pagan Meditations The Worlds of Aphrodite Artemis and Hestia Spring Publications ISBN 0 88214 330 1 The Power of Soul Robert Sardello Ziegler Alfred 2000 Archetypal Madicine Spring Publications ISBN 0 88214 374 3 Clift Jean Dalby Wallace Clift 1996 The Archetype of Pilgrimage Outer Action with Inner Meaning Paulist Press ISBN 0 8091 3599 X Miller David L 2005 Christs Spring Journal ISBN 1 882670 93 0 Hells and Holy Ghosts David L Miller Echo s Subtle Body Patricia Berry 1982 The Soul in Grief Robert Romanyshyn Technology as Symptom and Dream Robert Romanyshyn 1989 Mirror and Metaphor Images and Stories of Psychological Life Robert Romanyshyn 2001 Waking Dreams Mary Watkins The Alchemy of Discourse Paul Kugler Words As Eggs Psyche in Language and Clinic by Russell Arthur Lockhart The Moon and The Virgin Nor Hall The Academy of the Dead Stephen Simmer Svet Zhizni Light of Life in Russian Alexander Zelitchenko 2006 Samuels A 1995 Jung and the Post Jungians London Routledge Daniels Aaron 2011 Imaginal Reality Volume 1 Journey to the Voids Aeon Books ISBN 978 1 90465 849 8 Daniels Aaron 2011 Imaginal Reality Volume 2 Voidcraft Aeon Books ISBN 978 1 90465 856 6 External links editThe Archetypal Mind Spring Publications website Brent Dean Robbins James Hillman webpage International Association for Jungian Studies Jungian Archetypes Pacifica Graduate Institute Graduate school offering programs in Jungian and post Jungian studies 1 A journal for Archetypal studies and the arts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Archetypal psychology amp oldid 1144624627, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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