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Psychoanalytical Psychology, Personality & Identity Psychology, Psychopathology - General & Miscellaneous, Psychoanalysis
Jung's Self Psychology by Hall James A.,Polly Young-Eisendrath β€” book cover

Jung's Self Psychology

by Hall James A., Polly Young-Eisendrath
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Overview

Jung was fascinated by the problem of unity in the personality. If the personality is made up of multiple voices or affective-imaginal states, as he believed it was, then how does an individual achieve a core self? Jung concluded that a coherent and continuous self is the hard won achievement of consciousness, the product of a mature personality in the second half of life. His theory of the integration of multiple subjectivities into an "individuating self" anticipates current trends in constructivism and developmental psychology. Jung did not systematize his own work, nor attempt to make accessible many of his most complex ideas about the self. This volume explores his self psychology, its meaning and its application within the context of other contemporary theories of subjectivity.

To describe Jung's self psychology more fully in the light of contemporary theories, the authors introduce twelve other self theories in a comparative analysis of the clinical case of a midlife man in psychotherapy. From Kohut and Piaget to Lichtenberg and Loevinger, the authors compare Jung's theories with other clinical and developmental approaches. The book's final chapter offers cogent suggestions for future use of Jung's self psychology.

Unique in its treatment and understanding of Jung's theories, this volume illuminates and simplifies many of his central ideas about the self. For Jungians, it provides a contemporary context in which to read and systematize his work. For professionals in the larger therapeutic and educational communities, it offers an up-to-date introduction to a provocative and imaginative body of work that is a central chapter of modern theories of subjectivity.

Explores Jung's theories in the context of 12 other theories while discussing one particular case.

About the Author, Hall James A.,Polly Young-Eisendrath

Author of Hags and Heroes: A Feminist Approach to Jungian Psychotherapy with Couples (Inner City Publications, 1984), and co-Editor of The Book of the Self: Person, Pretext, Process (In press, New York University Press), Polly Young-Eisendrath has written numerous articles and lectured extensively. A Jungian analyst, licensed psychologist, and a clinical social worker, she teaches in the Human Development Department at Bryn Mawr College and is in independent practice with Clinical Associates West, Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania.

Florence Wiedemann is the President of the Analytical Psychological Association of Dallas, Vice President of the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts, a member of the International Association of Jungian Analysts and the American Psychological Association, and is in private practice in Dallas, Texas. A Diplomate Jungian Analyst from the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts, she writes and lectures internationally on topics related to the psychology of women.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

An important, comprehensive, and very readable contribution to our clinical understanding of personality development and psychopathology. This book should be read by every student of personality.' --Willis Overton, Ph.D.

Psychotherapy in Private Practice

"...very readable, cogent, interesting, and not-too-technical....Recommended reading...for the neophyte and the accomplished in personality theory and psychopathology."--Psychotherapy in Private Practice

Booknews

Explores Jung's self psychology, its meaning and its application, within the context of 12 other self theories (including those of Kohut, Piaget, Lichtenburg, and Loevinger) in a comparative analysis of the clinical case of a midlife man in psychotherapy. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
July 25, 1991
Publisher
New York : Guilford Press, c1991.
Pages
188
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780898625530

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