Upcoming Classes

The Archetypal Construct: Creative Synthesis in Visual Communication.

FIRST TUESDAY FORUM

February 4, 2020
12:30 – 1:30pm

Speaker: Gusty Lange, MPS, MA, ATR

... for the archetypes are the forms or river-beds along which the current of psychic life has always flowed. C.G. Jung (CW5, p. 228)

The phenomenon releasing origin is spiritual, and with each consciousness ... it becomes more realizable...  J. Gebser (The Ever-Present Origin, p. 542)

The inspiration for Professor Lange’s talk comes from a journey which began in 1979 with her discovery of the work of Carl Jung and the realization that synchronistically there was a connection between Design and Symbolism.  This led to her exploration of the existence of archetypal roots in any corporate identity. There is an unconscious link that designers and visual communicators seldom realize when creating symbols and thus so much is lost or never found in that creative process.  Also in the early ‘80’s, the world was changing radically through the spread of materialism and technocracy and the digital revolution.

This presentation explores these ideas as they relate to archetypal symbolism, basic to the collective unconscious, and to the conunctio.  Vision exists in psyche.  We will also look at how Jean Gebser’s concepts of time, space, consciousness are rooted in the archetypal construct which exists universally from archaic roots and timelessly into the future. Ultimately, this archetypal construct will be seen as inherent in the appearance of the archetypal web, a concrete visual and psychic form, representing the 20th century transiting into the 21st century.

Gusty Lange, MPS (creativity development), MS (Communications Design), ATR, Professor, CCE, Pratt Institute, Graduate Communications Design, MS & MFA, has practiced as an art therapist in several areas, in education, learning disabilities and with troubled adolescents, incarcerated youth, as well as in a private practice. She was a graphic designer in publishing and corporate design and is a faculty member of Graduate Communications Design at Pratt Institute since 1985.  She is a longtime student of Jung’s work and incorporated it into her teaching.  Professor Lange has had her students come to ARAS and the Kristine Mann Library since 1985 to research symbols as they relate to corporate identity.

No reservations required, suggested contribution fee of $2.00. All are welcome.

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MASTER 2020 Continuing ED

YOU DO NOT NEED A PAYPAL ACCOUNT. HERE IS HOW TO PAY WITH CREDIT CARD: On the Paypal login page, look below login fields for a boxed link that reads PAY WITH DEBIT OR CREDIT CARD.


Tuition

All 5-week courses are $175 for the general public and $150 for members, unless otherwise specified.
There is an additional $25 materials fee for the Art and Psyche: Dreams and Art course.

$150 (MEMBERS)  
$175 (GENERAL PUBLIC)

General Information

Location

Programs are held at the C.G. Jung Center at 28 East 39th Street, New York City, unless otherwise indicated on this announcement. 


Registration

The full fee must be paid at time of registration. You may by mail or fax (use registration form, below), or by telephone: pay with your MasterCard or Visa. Or you can register in person at the C.G. Jung Foundation, Monday–Thursday 10:00 am–5:00 p.m. FAX # 212-953-3989. Seating is limited and early purchase of tickets is strongly recommended.

Registration Form (required for mail-in or fax registrations only)

Refunds

Refunds for continuing education courses, less $15 for administrative services, will be made up to seven days before the first session. There will be no refunds issued after classes have begun. No exceptions will be made. Programs are subject to change without notice.


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Nietzsche & Jung: Modern Human in Search of a Soul: The Healing Function of Art

FIRST TUESDAY FORUM

January 14, 2020
12:30 – 1:30 pm

 (Note: This is the 2nd Tues. in January)

Speakers: Yunus Tuncel, PhD and Maria Taveras, LCSW

 Jung’s ideas echo those of the Nietzsche of the same period in that every human being has an inner spark, a “creative fire” to work on. Jung, like the post-romantic Nietzsche, recognizes the potential artist in everyone and has similar ideas on artistic disposition. One such idea is to bring all oppositional traits and tendencies into some sensible unity, without effacing the uniqueness of those traits. One major conflict that Jung touches upon is the conflict between the longing for happiness and passion for artistic creation (see Modern Man in Search of a Soul); in Nietzsche, this corresponds to the conflict between self-preservation and culture-making. Nietzsche also acknowledges the conflict between creation and destruction, and the conflict between the herd instinct and “overhumanliness.” The artist, whether in Nietzsche or Jung, not only acknowledges these conflicts but also gives a form or a meaning to them in an artistic medium and the work of art created.  

     We will see how these works are small stops on life’s journey and the self-creation of the artist. Both Nietzsche and Jung see art as a forum for self-transformation and healing. In and through art we can deal with our problems and suffering and turn negative emotions into positive, uplifting ones. As he presents it in “The Healing Function of Art,” Jung sees great potential in art’s capacity to heal.

Yunus Tuncel is a co-founder of the Nietzsche Circle and is the Editor-in-Chief of its electronic journal, The Agonist. He is the author of Towards a Genealogy of Spectacle, Agon in Nietzsche and Emotion in Sports and the editor of Nietzsche and Transhumanism. 

Maria Taveras is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City. She is also an artist who paints and sculpts archetypal images from her own dreams.  

No reservations required, suggested contribution fee of $2.00. All are welcome.

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A Jungian Aesthetic: Art, Active Imagination, and the Creative Process

FIRST TUESDAY FORUM

Tuesday, December 3, 2019
12:30 – 1:30 pm

Speaker: Maria Taveras, LCSW

A hundred years ago, in 1913, when Jung invented active imagination, a female voice from the unconscious said to him that what he was doing was art.  Jung disparaged this anima figure as “that aesthetic lady” and protested emphatically: “It is not art!”

In 20th century modern art, there was a famous Freudian aesthetic based on free association – surrealism.  Now in the 21st century, especially after the publication of Jung’s Red Book, and The Art of C.G. Jung, we have an opportunity, for the first time, to develop a Jungian aesthetic based on active imagination.  What exactly is the relation between art, active imagination, and the creative process?    

Note: This lecture is based on a program Maria Taveras gave at the Lunch Forum December 2018.

Maria Taveras, LCSW, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City.
She is a supervising analyst on the faculty of the C.G. Institute of New York, and The C.G. Jung Foundation of Analytical Psychology.  She is also an award-winning sculptor and painter of “Dream Art.”  To explore the unconscious sources of creativity, she paints and sculpts images from her own dreams. She has received two Gradiva Awards from the National Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis for her Dream Art. 

No reservations required, suggested contribution fee of $2.00. All are welcome.

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What Does Jung Mean in This Moment?

FIRST TUESDAY FORUM

Tuesday, November 5, 2019
12:30 – 1:30 pm

Speaker: Gary Brown, LCSW-R, LP

“In October, while I was alone on a journey, I was suddenly seized by an overpowering vision: I saw a monstrous flood covering all the northern and low-lying lands between the North Sea and the Alps. When it came up to Switzerland I saw that the mountains grew higher and higher to protect our country. I realized that a frightful catastrophe was in progress. I saw mighty yellow waves, the floating rubble of civilization, and the drowned bodies of uncounted thousands. Then the whole sea turned to blood.” C.G. Jung, MDR

Jung was born into the peaceful fin de siècle Europe, which became a bloody, war-torn world.  We humans managed to kill one hundred million of ourselves in the last century.  Jung had visions of blood running in the streets.

Jung’s method of “holding the opposites” enabled those fortunate enough to know of it to find the space beneath the conflicts and perhaps some meaningful peace.      

What the world needs now....!

Gary Brown, LCSW-R, LP, is a Jungian analyst in New York City. He is a supervising analyst on the faculty of the C.G. Jung Institute of New York and former vice president of The New York Association for Analytical Psychology. He is a member of the Foundation’s Continuing Education faculty and he was also past president of the Mid Hudson Jung Society. 

No reservations required, suggested contribution fee of $2.00. All are welcome.

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The Family as a Crucible for Individuation

Saturday Workshops

Saturday, October 26, 2019
9:30 am– 4:30 pm

A daylong seminar led by Lisa Marchiano, LCSW, NCPsyA
Contact hours: 6 CE contact hours for Licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists for this program.

Please note that if you received credit for Lisa Marchiano’s July 10, 2019, program on the Family as Crucible for Individuation, you cannot receive credit for this workshop. It is the same program.

The intimacy of family relationships will inevitably mean that we encounter parts of ourselves that are unlikely to surface in other contexts.  We may experience shadow aspects of our psyche that are usually split off, denied or disowned.  In this session we will explore how intimate relationships such as parenting can introduce us to these shadow parts. Being part of a family will challenge us to claim our authority, reconcile ourselves to our dark emotions, embrace the wisdom of the instincts, and forge a new relationship with our creative daimon. Family is indeed a crucible in which individuation can be quickened. In circumambulating this topic, we will use clinical vignettes, fairy tales and dreams.

Suggested Readings

Tatterhood
Baba Yaga
The Horned Women
Rumplestiltskin


Learning Objectives

  • Describe how family relationships can bring us into contact with disallowed parts of ourselves.
  • Discuss the ways in which family relationships offer us opportunities to integrate previously split off parts of ourselves such as aggression.
  • Explain how family relationships and parenting in particular require us to reconnect with healthy instincts.
  • Demonstrate how family life can lead to restoring a connection with creativity.
  • Identify ways in which addressing conflict in family relationships can help us consolidate a sense of personal authority.

Lisa Marchiano, LCSW, NCPsyA, is a licensed clinical social worker and diplomate Jungian analyst in private practice in Philadelphia, PA. Her writings have appeared in Psychological Perspectives, Quillette, and Areo. Along with two colleagues, Lisa produces the weekly podcast This Jungian Life, which examines a range of issues from a depth psychological perspective. She is currently working on a book about motherhood as a depth initiation. 


Contact hours: Six CE contact hours for Licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists for this program.

The C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology, Inc., SW CPE, is recognized by New York State Education Department’s State Board of Social Work as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed social workers #0350.

The C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology, Inc. is recognized by the New York State Education Department’s State Board for Mental Health Practitioners as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed psychoanalysts. #P-0015.

C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology, Inc. is recognized by the New York State Education Department’s State Board for Mental Health Practitioners as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed creative arts therapists, #CAT-0068.

Saturday, October 26, 2019: 9:30 am–4:30 p.m.
at the C.G. Jung Foundation, 28 East 39th Street, New York City


YOU DO NOT NEED A PAYPAL ACCOUNT. HERE IS HOW TO PAY WITH CREDIT CARD: On the Paypal login page, look below login fields for a boxed link that reads PAY WITH DEBIT OR CREDIT CARD.

Tuition
 $100 for members/students,
$110 for the general public

To Mail or Fax Your Registration,
Click Button to Download Form.

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Satisfaction in Work and Careers: Applying Jung’s Ideas

Continuing Education: Fall II

5 consecutive Mondays, 7:00 – 8:30 pm
Beginning November 11
Instructor: David Rottman, MA

7.5 CE contact hours for licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists

How do the ideas of C.G. Jung apply to finding and experiencing meaningful work? What is necessary psychologically to find the right career? What are Jung’s ideas about doing “the work of a lifetime”?  How do inner conflicts hold us back in our profession? In this class we will explore Jung’s writings, and those of his pupil Marie-Louise Von Franz, to address these questions and other common work issues such as dealing with difficult people and bosses, achieving acceptance and rewards, and understanding how our work can make a contribution to the world. 

FACULTY

William Baker, PsyD, is a clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst in private practice in New York City. He is currently on the faculty at the Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology at Yeshiva University, the William Alanson White Institute, and the Philadelphia Association of Jungian Analysts. Dr. Baker also serves as a member of the editorial staff at the Journal of Analytical Psychology.

Gary Brown, LCSW-R, LP, is a Jungian analyst in New York City. He is a supervising analyst on the faculty of the C.G. Jung Institute of New York and former vice president of The New York Association for Analytical Psychology. He is a member of the Foundation’s Continuing Education faculty and he was also past president of the Mid Hudson Jung Society.

Sanford L. Drob, PhD, is on the Core Faculty of the doctoral program in Clinical Psychology at Fielding Graduate University in Santa Barbara, CA, and the C.G. Jung Institute in New York. He holds doctorates in philosophy and clinical psychology and served for many years as the Director of Psychological Assessment and Senior Forensic Psychologist at Bellevue Hospital in New York. His Reading the Red Book: An Interpretive Guide to C. G. Jung’s Liber Novus was published by Spring Journal Books, in June 2012. His other books include Kabbalistic Visions: C.G. Jung and Jewish Mysticism, Kabbalah and Postmodernism: A Dialog, and Archetype of the Absolute:The Unity of Opposites in Mysticism, Philosophy and Psychology.

Cynthia Poorbaugh, MFA, LP, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City and Cold Spring, NY. She is a teacher and supervisor, and has presented papers on art and astrology at psychoanalytic training colloquia and international conferences. She has previously taught for the C.G. Jung Foundation on the relationship between Jung’s archetypal theory and astrology, and continues with her research into how astrology illuminates key facets of Jung’s theory and the symbolic attitude.

David Rottman, MA, is past President of the C.G. Jung Foundation. He holds a Masters in Applied Psychology from New York University and is the author of the book The Career as a Path to the Soul. He was Senior Vice President in charge of Career Development at JPMorgan Chase from 1984 to 2011 and the past President of the Career Counselors Consortium. He is a longtime member of the Foundation faculty and has a private practice in New York City.

 

General Information

Location

Programs are held at the C.G. Jung Center at 28 East 39th Street, New York City,
unless otherwise indicated on this announcement.

General Information

Location

Programs are held at the C.G. Jung Center at 28 East 39th Street, New York City,
unless otherwise indicated on this announcement.

Tuition

All 5-week courses are $175 for the general public and $150 for members.

Registration

The full fee must be paid at time of registration. You may register by mail or fax (use registration form, below), or by telephone: pay with your MasterCard or Visa. Or you can register in person at the C.G. Jung Foundation, Monday–Thursday 10:00 am–5:00 p.m. FAX # 212-953-3989.
Seating is limited and early purchase of tickets is strongly recommended.

›› Registration Form – Fall 2019 (PDF format) ‹‹

Refunds

Refunds for continuing education courses, less $15 for administrative services, will be made up to seven days before the first session. There will be no refunds issued after classes have begun. No exceptions will be made. Programs are subject to change without notice.


YOU DO NOT NEED A PAYPAL ACCOUNT. HERE IS HOW TO PAY WITH CREDIT CARD: On the Paypal login page, look below login fields for a boxed link that reads PAY WITH DEBIT OR CREDIT CARD.


Tuition
All 5-week courses are $175 for the general public and $150 for members.

 


$150 (MEMBERS)  
$175 (GENERAL PUBLIC)

For registration by mail or phone, please snail-mail this form:
Click Button to Download Form.

Include your credit card information or check, made payable to
the C.G. Jung Foundation, and a self-addressed stamped envelope to:
The C.G. Jung Foundation  
28 East 39th Street
 New York, NY 10016
Fax: 212-953-3989


Refunds for Advanced Seminars courses, less $50 for administrative services, will be made up to seven days before the first session. See below for full policy on refunds and cancellations.

PROGRAM NOTES

These seminars are intended both for the general public and for professionals.

Eighteen (18) continuing education credits for New York State licensed social workers, psychoanalysts and creative arts therapists are offered for each seminar.

Please note that credit is granted separately for each of the seminars. The program is subject to change without notice.

Policy on cancellation and refunds:

The C.G. Jung Foundation reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to cancel a program at any time. If the Jung Foundation cancels a program, you will receive a full refund of your registration fee.

Refunds are available (less a $50 processing fee) up to seven days before your program. Nonrefundable credit toward a future Jung Foundation program (less a $50 processing fee) is available if you give notice between seven and one day(s) before your program. Credit may be applied to any Jung Foundation program for one year following date of issue.

No credit or refund is available if you cancel on the day of the program; if you do not attend; or if you leave a program early for any reason.

Requests to cancel should be made in writing or by email. Written requests may be sent to:

Office of the Executive Director, C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology
28 East 39th Street,
New York, NY 10016
Email requests may be sent to: C. G. Jung Foundation

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That Which Crosses Me: The Psychological Function of Astrological Saturn

Continuing Education: Fall II

3 consecutive Saturdays, 1:30–4:15pm
Dates: November 9, 16, 23
Instructor: Cynthia Poorbaugh, MFA, LP

7.5 CE contact hours for licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists

Astrological Saturn in the natal chart symbolizes the experience in which we are forced by necessity to bring our divine nature down to earth to manifest as our most fully incarnated self. In this class, we will consider the evolution of this archetypal principle in human symbolism in order to understand its psychological roots in our personal experience. Using the astrological chart, we will envision how the force of this archetypal energy defines and sculpts our sense of self as it paradoxically curtails, constricts and denies our most cherished ideals and unconscious assumptions.

The class will take an archetypal, psychological approach to astrology, and is intended to broaden our understanding of Jung’s archetypal theory, increase our capacity for symbolic thinking, and to offer new perspectives on the relationship between ego and archetype or the objective psyche.

We will cover fundamental meanings of the astrological symbols as needed, but if you are unfamiliar with the basic symbolism of the zodiac and planets, or would like a review from a Jungian perspective, I recommend Clare Martin’s Mapping of the Psyche, An Introduction to Psychological Astrology, Vols.1 & 2. 

Location: 145 East 29th Street, 1A.  Please note that this class has a limited enrollment.

FACULTY

William Baker, PsyD, is a clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst in private practice in New York City. He is currently on the faculty at the Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology at Yeshiva University, the William Alanson White Institute, and the Philadelphia Association of Jungian Analysts. Dr. Baker also serves as a member of the editorial staff at the Journal of Analytical Psychology.

Gary Brown, LCSW-R, LP, is a Jungian analyst in New York City. He is a supervising analyst on the faculty of the C.G. Jung Institute of New York and former vice president of The New York Association for Analytical Psychology. He is a member of the Foundation’s Continuing Education faculty and he was also past president of the Mid Hudson Jung Society.

Sanford L. Drob, PhD, is on the Core Faculty of the doctoral program in Clinical Psychology at Fielding Graduate University in Santa Barbara, CA, and the C.G. Jung Institute in New York. He holds doctorates in philosophy and clinical psychology and served for many years as the Director of Psychological Assessment and Senior Forensic Psychologist at Bellevue Hospital in New York. His Reading the Red Book: An Interpretive Guide to C. G. Jung’s Liber Novus was published by Spring Journal Books, in June 2012. His other books include Kabbalistic Visions: C.G. Jung and Jewish Mysticism, Kabbalah and Postmodernism: A Dialog, and Archetype of the Absolute:The Unity of Opposites in Mysticism, Philosophy and Psychology.

Cynthia Poorbaugh, MFA, LP, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City and Cold Spring, NY. She is a teacher and supervisor, and has presented papers on art and astrology at psychoanalytic training colloquia and international conferences. She has previously taught for the C.G. Jung Foundation on the relationship between Jung’s archetypal theory and astrology, and continues with her research into how astrology illuminates key facets of Jung’s theory and the symbolic attitude.

David Rottman, MA, is past President of the C.G. Jung Foundation. He holds a Masters in Applied Psychology from New York University and is the author of the book The Career as a Path to the Soul. He was Senior Vice President in charge of Career Development at JPMorgan Chase from 1984 to 2011 and the past President of the Career Counselors Consortium. He is a longtime member of the Foundation faculty and has a private practice in New York City.

General Information

Location

Programs are held at the C.G. Jung Center at 28 East 39th Street, New York City,
unless otherwise indicated on this announcement.

Tuition

All 5-week courses are $175 for the general public and $150 for members.

Registration

The full fee must be paid at time of registration. You may register by mail or fax (use registration form, below), or by telephone: pay with your MasterCard or Visa. Or you can register in person at the C.G. Jung Foundation, Monday–Thursday 10:00 am–5:00 p.m. FAX # 212-953-3989.
Seating is limited and early purchase of tickets is strongly recommended.

›› Registration Form – Fall 2019 (PDF format) ‹‹

Refunds

Refunds for continuing education courses, less $15 for administrative services, will be made up to seven days before the first session. There will be no refunds issued after classes have begun. No exceptions will be made. Programs are subject to change without notice.


YOU DO NOT NEED A PAYPAL ACCOUNT. HERE IS HOW TO PAY WITH CREDIT CARD: On the Paypal login page, look below login fields for a boxed link that reads PAY WITH DEBIT OR CREDIT CARD.


Tuition
All 5-week courses are $175 for the general public and $150 for members.

 


$150 (MEMBERS)  
$175 (GENERAL PUBLIC)

For registration by mail or phone, please snail-mail this form:
Click Button to Download Form.

Include your credit card information or check, made payable to
the C.G. Jung Foundation, and a self-addressed stamped envelope to:
The C.G. Jung Foundation  
28 East 39th Street
 New York, NY 10016
Fax: 212-953-3989


Refunds for Advanced Seminars courses, less $50 for administrative services, will be made up to seven days before the first session. See below for full policy on refunds and cancellations.

PROGRAM NOTES

These seminars are intended both for the general public and for professionals.

Eighteen (18) continuing education credits for New York State licensed social workers, psychoanalysts and creative arts therapists are offered for each seminar.

Please note that credit is granted separately for each of the seminars. The program is subject to change without notice.

Policy on cancellation and refunds:

The C.G. Jung Foundation reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to cancel a program at any time. If the Jung Foundation cancels a program, you will receive a full refund of your registration fee.

Refunds are available (less a $50 processing fee) up to seven days before your program. Nonrefundable credit toward a future Jung Foundation program (less a $50 processing fee) is available if you give notice between seven and one day(s) before your program. Credit may be applied to any Jung Foundation program for one year following date of issue.

No credit or refund is available if you cancel on the day of the program; if you do not attend; or if you leave a program early for any reason.

Requests to cancel should be made in writing or by email. Written requests may be sent to:

Office of the Executive Director, C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology
28 East 39th Street,
New York, NY 10016
Email requests may be sent to: C. G. Jung Foundation

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Oedipus Redux

Continuing Education: Fall II

5 Thursdays, 7:00 – 8:30 pm
Beginning November 7 (excluding November 28)
Instructor: William Baker, PsyD

7.5 CE contact hours for licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists

[Freud’s] is the honor of having discovered the first archetype, the Oedipus complex. That is a mythological and a psychological motif simultaneously (C.G. Jung Letters p. 525, 1949).

The Oedipus is essentially a tragic analysis.  Everything is already there, so it needs only to be extricated….  How favorable that is for the poet! But I fear the Oedipus is one of a kind without any secondary species (Schiller to Goethe, 1797).

Who was Oedipus and what’s the big deal with his complex? What do the terms ‘Oedipal’ and ‘pre-Oedipal’ mean, and how can they inform our psychological understanding? Beginning with a reading of Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, this course will provide a detailed exploration of the mythology and psychology of Oedipus. From Jung and Freud to Lacan and Hillman, we will compare and contrast analytic theories while creating a composite portrait of modernity’s most central mythological and psychological figure.

Location: 15 East 11th Street, Apt. 1L.  Please note that this class has a limited enrollment.

FACULTY

William Baker, PsyD, is a clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst in private practice in New York City. He is currently on the faculty at the Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology at Yeshiva University, the William Alanson White Institute, and the Philadelphia Association of Jungian Analysts. Dr. Baker also serves as a member of the editorial staff at the Journal of Analytical Psychology.

Gary Brown, LCSW-R, LP, is a Jungian analyst in New York City. He is a supervising analyst on the faculty of the C.G. Jung Institute of New York and former vice president of The New York Association for Analytical Psychology. He is a member of the Foundation’s Continuing Education faculty and he was also past president of the Mid Hudson Jung Society.

Sanford L. Drob, PhD, is on the Core Faculty of the doctoral program in Clinical Psychology at Fielding Graduate University in Santa Barbara, CA, and the C.G. Jung Institute in New York. He holds doctorates in philosophy and clinical psychology and served for many years as the Director of Psychological Assessment and Senior Forensic Psychologist at Bellevue Hospital in New York. His Reading the Red Book: An Interpretive Guide to C. G. Jung’s Liber Novus was published by Spring Journal Books, in June 2012. His other books include Kabbalistic Visions: C.G. Jung and Jewish Mysticism, Kabbalah and Postmodernism: A Dialog, and Archetype of the Absolute:The Unity of Opposites in Mysticism, Philosophy and Psychology.

Cynthia Poorbaugh, MFA, LP, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City and Cold Spring, NY. She is a teacher and supervisor, and has presented papers on art and astrology at psychoanalytic training colloquia and international conferences. She has previously taught for the C.G. Jung Foundation on the relationship between Jung’s archetypal theory and astrology, and continues with her research into how astrology illuminates key facets of Jung’s theory and the symbolic attitude.

David Rottman, MA, is past President of the C.G. Jung Foundation. He holds a Masters in Applied Psychology from New York University and is the author of the book The Career as a Path to the Soul. He was Senior Vice President in charge of Career Development at JPMorgan Chase from 1984 to 2011 and the past President of the Career Counselors Consortium. He is a longtime member of the Foundation faculty and has a private practice in New York City.

General Information

Location

Programs are held at the C.G. Jung Center at 28 East 39th Street, New York City,
unless otherwise indicated on this announcement.

Tuition

All 5-week courses are $175 for the general public and $150 for members.

Registration

The full fee must be paid at time of registration. You may register by mail or fax (use registration form, below), or by telephone: pay with your MasterCard or Visa. Or you can register in person at the C.G. Jung Foundation, Monday–Thursday 10:00 am–5:00 p.m. FAX # 212-953-3989.
Seating is limited and early purchase of tickets is strongly recommended.

›› Registration Form – Fall 2019 (PDF format) ‹‹

Refunds

Refunds for continuing education courses, less $15 for administrative services, will be made up to seven days before the first session. There will be no refunds issued after classes have begun. No exceptions will be made. Programs are subject to change without notice.


YOU DO NOT NEED A PAYPAL ACCOUNT. HERE IS HOW TO PAY WITH CREDIT CARD: On the Paypal login page, look below login fields for a boxed link that reads PAY WITH DEBIT OR CREDIT CARD.


Tuition
All 5-week courses are $175 for the general public and $150 for members.

 


$150 (MEMBERS)  
$175 (GENERAL PUBLIC)

For registration by mail or phone, please snail-mail this form:
Click Button to Download Form.

Include your credit card information or check, made payable to
the C.G. Jung Foundation, and a self-addressed stamped envelope to:
The C.G. Jung Foundation  
28 East 39th Street
 New York, NY 10016
Fax: 212-953-3989


Refunds for Advanced Seminars courses, less $50 for administrative services, will be made up to seven days before the first session. See below for full policy on refunds and cancellations.

PROGRAM NOTES

These seminars are intended both for the general public and for professionals.

Eighteen (18) continuing education credits for New York State licensed social workers, psychoanalysts and creative arts therapists are offered for each seminar.

Please note that credit is granted separately for each of the seminars. The program is subject to change without notice.

Policy on cancellation and refunds:

The C.G. Jung Foundation reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to cancel a program at any time. If the Jung Foundation cancels a program, you will receive a full refund of your registration fee.

Refunds are available (less a $50 processing fee) up to seven days before your program. Nonrefundable credit toward a future Jung Foundation program (less a $50 processing fee) is available if you give notice between seven and one day(s) before your program. Credit may be applied to any Jung Foundation program for one year following date of issue.

No credit or refund is available if you cancel on the day of the program; if you do not attend; or if you leave a program early for any reason.

Requests to cancel should be made in writing or by email. Written requests may be sent to:

Office of the Executive Director, C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology
28 East 39th Street,
New York, NY 10016
Email requests may be sent to: C. G. Jung Foundation

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Jungian Psychology Revisited:  An Overview

Continuing Education: Fall 2019

5 consecutive Mondays, 6:00 – 7:30 pm
Beginning October 7
Instructor: Gary Brown, LCSW-R, LP

7.5 CE contact hours for licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists

Jung’s ideas are broad and deep and often not fully understood, so there comes a time when revisiting them and clarifying their meaning becomes vital.  Most students of Jung’s work necessarily learn of it in fragments, often missing important distinctions, such as the difference between the archetype and the archetypal image.  An overview of his work can help us to comprehend the general scope of his ideas as a foundation for further study.

In this course, we will review Jung’s model of the psyche, especially as used in dreams, the sub-personalities of the psyche, and complexes.  This overview of basic concepts will lay the building blocks of Jung’s complex and often misunderstood Analytical Psychology.

Learning Objectives here
 

FACULTY

William Baker, PsyD, is a clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst in private practice in New York City. He is currently on the faculty at the Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology at Yeshiva University, the William Alanson White Institute, and the Philadelphia Association of Jungian Analysts. Dr. Baker also serves as a member of the editorial staff at the Journal of Analytical Psychology.

Gary Brown, LCSW-R, LP, is a Jungian analyst in New York City. He is a supervising analyst on the faculty of the C.G. Jung Institute of New York and former vice president of The New York Association for Analytical Psychology. He is a member of the Foundation’s Continuing Education faculty and he was also past president of the Mid Hudson Jung Society.

Sanford L. Drob, PhD, is on the Core Faculty of the doctoral program in Clinical Psychology at Fielding Graduate University in Santa Barbara, CA, and the C.G. Jung Institute in New York. He holds doctorates in philosophy and clinical psychology and served for many years as the Director of Psychological Assessment and Senior Forensic Psychologist at Bellevue Hospital in New York. His Reading the Red Book: An Interpretive Guide to C. G. Jung’s Liber Novus was published by Spring Journal Books, in June 2012. His other books include Kabbalistic Visions: C.G. Jung and Jewish Mysticism, Kabbalah and Postmodernism: A Dialog, and Archetype of the Absolute:The Unity of Opposites in Mysticism, Philosophy and Psychology.

Cynthia Poorbaugh, MFA, LP, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City and Cold Spring, NY. She is a teacher and supervisor, and has presented papers on art and astrology at psychoanalytic training colloquia and international conferences. She has previously taught for the C.G. Jung Foundation on the relationship between Jung’s archetypal theory and astrology, and continues with her research into how astrology illuminates key facets of Jung’s theory and the symbolic attitude.

David Rottman, MA, is past President of the C.G. Jung Foundation. He holds a Masters in Applied Psychology from New York University and is the author of the book The Career as a Path to the Soul. He was Senior Vice President in charge of Career Development at JPMorgan Chase from 1984 to 2011 and the past President of the Career Counselors Consortium. He is a longtime member of the Foundation faculty and has a private practice in New York City.

General Information

Location

Programs are held at the C.G. Jung Center at 28 East 39th Street, New York City,
unless otherwise indicated on this announcement.

Tuition

All 5-week courses are $175 for the general public and $150 for members.

Registration

The full fee must be paid at time of registration. You may register by mail or fax (use registration form, below), or by telephone: pay with your MasterCard or Visa. Or you can register in person at the C.G. Jung Foundation, Monday–Thursday 10:00 am–5:00 p.m. FAX # 212-953-3989.
Seating is limited and early purchase of tickets is strongly recommended.

›› Registration Form – Fall 2019 (PDF format) ‹‹

Refunds

Refunds for continuing education courses, less $15 for administrative services, will be made up to seven days before the first session. There will be no refunds issued after classes have begun. No exceptions will be made. Programs are subject to change without notice.


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Tuition
All 5-week courses are $175 for the general public and $150 for members.

 


$150 (MEMBERS)  
$175 (GENERAL PUBLIC)

For registration by mail or phone, please snail-mail this form:
Click Button to Download Form.

Include your credit card information or check, made payable to
the C.G. Jung Foundation, and a self-addressed stamped envelope to:
The C.G. Jung Foundation  
28 East 39th Street
 New York, NY 10016
Fax: 212-953-3989


Refunds for Advanced Seminars courses, less $50 for administrative services, will be made up to seven days before the first session. See below for full policy on refunds and cancellations.

PROGRAM NOTES

These seminars are intended both for the general public and for professionals.

Eighteen (18) continuing education credits for New York State licensed social workers, psychoanalysts and creative arts therapists are offered for each seminar.

Please note that credit is granted separately for each of the seminars. The program is subject to change without notice.

Policy on cancellation and refunds:

The C.G. Jung Foundation reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to cancel a program at any time. If the Jung Foundation cancels a program, you will receive a full refund of your registration fee.

Refunds are available (less a $50 processing fee) up to seven days before your program. Nonrefundable credit toward a future Jung Foundation program (less a $50 processing fee) is available if you give notice between seven and one day(s) before your program. Credit may be applied to any Jung Foundation program for one year following date of issue.

No credit or refund is available if you cancel on the day of the program; if you do not attend; or if you leave a program early for any reason.

Requests to cancel should be made in writing or by email. Written requests may be sent to:

Office of the Executive Director, C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology
28 East 39th Street,
New York, NY 10016
Email requests may be sent to: C. G. Jung Foundation

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