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About the C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology
by C.G. Jung Foundation
Accessed: 3/5/19
NOTICE: THIS WORK MAY BE PROTECTED BY COPYRIGHT
Home
Welcome to the C.G. Jung Foundation in New York City!
We are pleased to present the following events and learning opportunities. Please join us!
Events and opportunities include:
• Advanced Seminars
• Classes
• Workshops
• Tuesday Lunch Forums
• Audio-tapes
Upcoming Advanced Seminars with CE credits
Spring 2019: Transference/Countertransference
12 Wednesdays: 7:00 - 8:30 pm
February 6 – May 1 (excluding April 17)
Instructor: Irina Doctoroff, LMFT, LP
This course will provide an overview of major clinical issues involved in working in the transference/countertransference field. The class will focus on practical clinical application of theoretical concepts. To that end we will look at both Jungian and psychoanalytic writings as applied to actual cases. We will assess various forms of communication through which analyst and analysand interact and experience one another.
Upcoming Classes
Online-Only Class
Jungian Dream Interpretation Online
5 consecutive Tuesdays, 7:00–8:30 pm, Eastern Time, USA
Beginning February 26, 2019
Instructor Maxson J. McDowell, PhD, LMSW, LP
7.5 CE contact hours for licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists.
We don’t know where dreams come from but, from experience, we know their purpose. They show us the next possible step in our developing consciousness. They warn us if we are going astray, encourage us if we need it and offer penetrating insights into our confusion. To interpret dreams we have to be disciplined and logical but also emotional, feeling, imaginative and sensate. Using Jung’s concepts as our guide, we will combine our insights to explore each dream and feel success when the class as a whole recognizes an answer and experiences a deepening of consciousness.
Spring I: Beginning February 25, 2019
Relationships with Others: What Can We Learn About Them From C.G. Jung?
5 consecutive Mondays, 7:00–8:40 pm
Beginning February 25, 2019
Instructor David Rottman, MA
Fulfilling relationships are “Extroverted Individuation” according to C.G. Jung. In this course we will explore what Jung meant by that statement, as well as his many other helpful ideas (and the ideas of his pupil, Marie-Louise Von Franz) about the nature of both conscious and unconscious connections between people.
Spring II: Beginning April 8, 2019
Trauma and the Healing Power of the Image
5 consecutive Mondays, 6:00–7:40 pm
Beginning April 8, 2019
Instructor Gary Brown, LCSW, LP
Religion and, later, psychoanalytic work addressed the reality of trauma in human life. Some of the early foci of the newly discovered and developed psychotherapy were “shell shock” and hysteria. At the heart of this was psyche, the mysterious function which develops images from the pains and pleasures of life and allows meaning to happen. We will explore what Jung discovered: that images contain and hold affect, the experience of feeling or emotion.
The Art of C.G. Jung
5 consecutive Wednesdays, 6:30–8:10 pm
Beginning April 10, 2019
Instructor Maria Taveras, LCSW
Inspiration for this course derives from the book The Art of C.G. Jung, which documents the full extent of Jung’s creative imagination as a visual artist. It comprises examples of Jung’s visual art both before and after The Red Book and includes essays that situate Jung’s artistry in the context of modern art. The Art of C.G. Jung will be required reading in this course, and participants will also apply their own creative imagination by doing hands-on, in-class art exercises under the guidance of the instructor.
Revisioning Jungian Theory: A Reading Seminar
5 consecutive Wednesdays, 7:00–8:40 pm
Beginning April 10, 2019
Instructor Harry W. Fogarty, PhD
We will read together Warren Colman’s Act and Image-The Emergence of Symbolic Imagination, along with a critical commentary on Colman’s approach, in an effort to refresh and intensify our understanding of archetypal theory and Jungian process. We shall engage how symbols come to be and function for us as individuals in community.
Note: This course is held at 305 West 107th Street, Suite N.
Sacrifice and Individuation
5 consecutive Thursdays, 6:30–8:10 pm
Beginning April 11, 2019
Instructor David Walczyk, EdD, LP
In this class, we seek to answer the question, what is the relationship between sacrifice and living the process of individuation? Participants are encouraged to consider their relationship to sacrifice and its purpose in their individuation and in the individuation of those they care about. With a firm grounding in the history and fundamentals of sacrifice and individuation, we will consider how that relationship manifests itself in our time: first, collectively in the wellness industry and then personally in clinical practice.
Upcoming Tuesday Lunch Forums
Images of Coniunctio in Christiana Morgan's Visions
Tuesday, March 5, 2019: 12:30 – 1:30 pm
A First Tuesday Lunch Forum presented by Ilona Melker, LCSW.
Jung's Vision Seminars are based on the manuscripts of his and Christiana Morgan. Jung did not address in the seminars that the direction of the visions was moving toward coniunctio, the uniting of the masculine with the feminine as opposites. Our visual explorations will be some unexplored images of coniunctio in the manuscripts that Jung did not touch upon.
Upcoming Workshops
Falling Apart and Coming Together: Addressing the Pain of Trauma Using Art Based Approaches
Saturday, February 23, 2019:
9:30 am– 4:30 pm
A day-long workshop led by Paula Howie, ATR-BC, LPC, LCPAT
Contact hours: 6 CE contact hours for Licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists for this program.
This session will focus on the history of trauma with an emphasis on the Intensive Trauma Therapy (ITT) approach created by Drs. Linda Gantt and Louis Tinnin from their work in the 1980s and 1990s. The ITT intervention is an art-focused approach. It is designed to treat the common clusters of trauma-based problems, including eliminating intrusive and arousal symptoms, and reducing avoidance and numbing symptoms without the person reliving the trauma. The presentation will cover the theoretical basis of the approach and will include lecture, personal experiential, and representative case materials.
The Red Book: An Encounter with Jung's Words and Images
Saturday, March 30, 2019:
9:30 am– 4:30 pm
A day-long workshop led by Sanford L. Drob, PhD
Contact hours: 6 CE contact hours for Licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists for this program.
This workshop will provide an introduction to Jung's Red Book (Liber Novus) and a meditation upon a selection of Jung's painted images. Our primary goals will be to understand the relevance of The Red Book to personal growth, the psychotherapeutic process, and the pursuit of life-meaning. We will examine the Red Book in the context of Jung's earlier and later works, his personal crisis in relationship to Freud, and the work's place in the history of ideas. Amongst the topics to be considered: meaning and the absurd, chaos and order, the death of the inner hero, masculine and feminine, shadow and persona, good and evil, reason and unreason, sanity and madness, "accepting all," God and self, and the guidance of one's soul.
Natural Cycles, Natural Symbols: Individuation as Ecology
Saturday, April 13, 2019:
9:30 am– 4:30 pm
A day-long workshop led by Melanie Starr Costello, PhD
Contact hours: 6 CE contact hours for Licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists for this program.
By aligning psycho-spiritual maturation with the natural process, our program envisages individuation as a path that embraces the inextricable relationship between life and death principles and assents to Creation as mystery. We will confront dominant cultural constructs that alienate us from the body and obstruct psyche's connection with the non-human world. In hope of redress, we construct an alternative model of consciousness, envisaging a nature-based-symbolic attitude that reconnects us with our roots in nature, conjoining mind, soul, and cosmos.
We will discuss the varied archetypal energies that inform our identities and chosen place in the world. We consider: what is the purpose of longevity? What is wisdom? We conclude by reconstructing our portrait of the individuated person, elucidating the nature-based dimensions of social, family and spiritual life.
Inner Authority: Its Definition and Its Development
Saturday, May 4, 2019:
9:30 am– 4:30 pm
A day-long workshop led by Julie Bondanza, PhD
Contact hours: 6 CE contact hours for Licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists for this program.
Sociologists describe three types of authority: legal/rational, which is based on enacted rules and regulations such as in government or other established institutions; traditional, which is based on long established cultural patterns; and charismatic authority, which is based on a person’s ability that can inspire devotion and obedience. But in this workshop we will focus on the development of inner authority through which we can become and stand for who we truly are. We will use myths, fairy tales, dreams and personal experience to elaborate this idea.
Quadrant
New Issue of Quadrant Published
Vol XLVIII:1 Spring/Summer 2018
Articles include:
• Window Shades and Bad Guys: Dreamscapes of Transformation in the Face of War
— Robin B. Zeiger
• Miss Frank Miller: Jung's Sherpa from Alabama
— Samuel L. Ryals
• The Living Skeleton: A Depth Psychological Study of Anorexia Nervosa based on C.G. Jung's Complex Theory
— Casey J. Winter
• Soul and Spirit from a Psychological Perspective
— Paul Ashton
• Tropes of Trackings, Tropes of Traps
— Craig Canfield
• In Memoriam: Erel Shalit, PhD
— Kathryn Madden, Nancy Swift Furlotti, Robin B. Zeiger
Reviews by Kevin J. Foley and Jane Selinske.
• Book Reviews
— Hilda Seidman, Deborah Howell, John Romig Johnson
28 East 39th Street, New York, NY 10016 | Tel: (212) 697-6430 | info@cgjungny.org
About
The C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology, founded in 1962, is dedicated to helping men and women grow in conscious awareness of the psychological realities in themselves and society, find healing and meaning in their lives, reach greater depth in their relationships, and live in response to their discovered sense of purpose. The Foundation is located in its mid-Manhattan brownstone, which it shares with the other institutional members of the C.G. Jung Center.
We welcome the public to our extensive program of lectures, seminars, courses, symposia, and workshops. Our bookstore offers for sale a wide selection of books on analytical psychology and related subjects, and our journal Quadrant offers interesting and accessible articles and reviews on analytical psychology.
The work of the C.G. Jung Foundation is made possible by the generosity of its members.
Please support our important activities with your contribution.
Board of Trustees
Jane Selinske, President
Julie M. Bondanza, Vice President
Rollin Bush, Treasurer
Anne Ortelee, Secretary
Harmar Brereton
Joanne Bruno
Teresa Cintron
Melanie Starr Costello
Sara E. Gil-Ramos
Heide M. Kolb
Ann Walle
David Weiss
Janet M. Careswell, Executive Director
jcareswell@cgjungny.org
Bailey Anderson Webmaster
Our activities include:
• Presenting an educational program on various aspects of Jungian thought, from the fundamentals of analytical psychology to the processes of social and cultural unfolding.
• Offering continuing education courses, workshops, discussion forums, and conferences.
• Offering seminars for professionals in the field of mental health, in cooperation with the C.G. Jung Institute of New York.
• Encouraging and disseminating research, discourse, and writing on analytical psychology, archetypal symbolism, and related areas of Jungian thought.
• Publishing Quadrant: The Journal of the C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology, and other materials such as tapes of lectures and symposia.
• Providing a book service, encompassing a bookstore and a mail-order service.
• Cooperating and collaborating with other Jungian organizations on projects of mutual importance.
• Administering the C.G. Jung Center building.
by C.G. Jung Foundation
Accessed: 3/5/19
NOTICE: THIS WORK MAY BE PROTECTED BY COPYRIGHT
YOU ARE REQUIRED TO READ THE COPYRIGHT NOTICE AT THIS LINK BEFORE YOU READ THE FOLLOWING WORK, THAT IS AVAILABLE SOLELY FOR PRIVATE STUDY, SCHOLARSHIP OR RESEARCH PURSUANT TO 17 U.S.C. SECTION 107 AND 108. IN THE EVENT THAT THE LIBRARY DETERMINES THAT UNLAWFUL COPYING OF THIS WORK HAS OCCURRED, THE LIBRARY HAS THE RIGHT TO BLOCK THE I.P. ADDRESS AT WHICH THE UNLAWFUL COPYING APPEARED TO HAVE OCCURRED. THANK YOU FOR RESPECTING THE RIGHTS OF COPYRIGHT OWNERS.
Ha explained: "Now, however, you make a bridge between you and the one longs for the below. But the serpent crawls at the top and draws the sun up. Then both of you move upward and want to go to the upper (), but the sun is below and tries to draw you down. But you draw a line above the below and long for the above and are completely at one. There the serpent comes and wants to drink from the vessel of the below. But there comes the upper cone and stops. Like the serpent, the looking coils back and moves forward again and afterward you very much (--) long to return. But the lower sun pulls and thus you become balanced again. But soon you fall backward, since the one has reached out toward the upper sun. The other does not want this and so you fall asunder, and therefore you must bind yourselves together three times. Then you stand upright again and you hold both suns before you, as if they were your eyes, the light of the above and the below before you and you stretch your arms out toward it, and you come together to become one and must separate the two suns and you long to return a little to the lower and reach out toward the upper. But the lower cone has swallowed the upper cone into itself, because the suns were so close. Therefore you place the upper cone back up again, and because the lower is then no longer there, you want to draw it up again and have a profound longing for the lower cone, while it is empty Above, since the sun Above the line is invisible. Because you have longed to return downward for so long, the upper cone comes down and tries to capture the invisible lower sun within itself. There the serpent's way goes at the very top, you are split and everything below is beneath the ground. You long to be further above, but the lower longing already comes crawling like a serpent, and you build a prison over her. But there the lower comes up, you long to be at the very bottom and the two suns suddenly reappear, close together. You long for this and come to be imprisoned. Then the one is defiant and the other longs for the below. The prison opens, the one longs even more to be below, but the defiant one longs for the above and is no longer defiant, but longs for what is to come. And thus it comes to pass: the sun rises at the bottom, but it is imprisoned and above three nest boxes are made for you two and the upper sun, which you expect, because you have imprisoned the lower one. But now the upper cone comes down powerfully and divides you and swallows the lower cone. This is impossible. Therefore you place the cones tip to tip and curl up toward the front in the center. Because that's no way to leave matters! So it has to happen otherwise. The one attempts to reach upward, the other downward; you must strive to do this, since if the tips of the cones meet, they can hardly be separated anymore --therefore I have placed the hard seed in-between. Tip to tip -- that would be too beautifully regular. This pleases father and mother, but where does that leave me? And my seed? Therefore a quick change of plan! One makes a bridge between you both, imprisons the lower sun again, the one longs for the above and the below, but the other longs especially strongly for the forward, above and below. Thus the future can become -- see, how well I can already say it -- yes, indeed, I am clever -- cleverer than you -- since you have taken matters in hand so well, you also get everything beneath the roof and into the house, the serpent, and the two suns. That is always most amusing. But you are separated and because you have drawn the line above, the serpent and the suns are too far below. This happens because beforehand you curled around yourself from below. But you come together and into agreement and stand upright, because it is good and amusing and fine and you say: thus shall it remain. But down comes the upper cone, because it felt dissatisfied, that you had set a limit above beforehand. The upper cone reaches out immediately for its sun -- but there is nowhere a sun to be found anymore and the serpent also jumps up, to catch the suns. You fall over, and one of you is eaten by the lower cone. With the help of the upper cone you get him out and in return you give the lower cone its sun and the upper cone its as well. You spread yourself out like the one-eyed, who wanders in heaven and hold the cones beneath you -- but in the end matters still go awry. You leave the cones and the suns to go and stand side by side and still do not want the same. In the end you agree to bind yourself threefold to the upper cone descending from above. / I am called Ha-Ha-Ha -- a jolly name -- I am clever -- look here, my last sign, that is the magic of the white man who lived in the great magic house, the magic which you call Christianity. Your medicine man said so himself: I and the father are one, no one comes to the father other than through me. I told you so, the upper cone is the father. He has bound himself threefold to you and stands between the other and the father. Therefore the other must go through him, if he wants to reach the cone" (pp. 13-14).
-- The Red Book: Liber Novus, by C.G. Jung
Home
Welcome to the C.G. Jung Foundation in New York City!
We are pleased to present the following events and learning opportunities. Please join us!
Events and opportunities include:
• Advanced Seminars
• Classes
• Workshops
• Tuesday Lunch Forums
• Audio-tapes
Upcoming Advanced Seminars with CE credits
Spring 2019: Transference/Countertransference
12 Wednesdays: 7:00 - 8:30 pm
February 6 – May 1 (excluding April 17)
Instructor: Irina Doctoroff, LMFT, LP
This course will provide an overview of major clinical issues involved in working in the transference/countertransference field. The class will focus on practical clinical application of theoretical concepts. To that end we will look at both Jungian and psychoanalytic writings as applied to actual cases. We will assess various forms of communication through which analyst and analysand interact and experience one another.
Upcoming Classes
Online-Only Class
Jungian Dream Interpretation Online
5 consecutive Tuesdays, 7:00–8:30 pm, Eastern Time, USA
Beginning February 26, 2019
Instructor Maxson J. McDowell, PhD, LMSW, LP
7.5 CE contact hours for licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists.
We don’t know where dreams come from but, from experience, we know their purpose. They show us the next possible step in our developing consciousness. They warn us if we are going astray, encourage us if we need it and offer penetrating insights into our confusion. To interpret dreams we have to be disciplined and logical but also emotional, feeling, imaginative and sensate. Using Jung’s concepts as our guide, we will combine our insights to explore each dream and feel success when the class as a whole recognizes an answer and experiences a deepening of consciousness.
Spring I: Beginning February 25, 2019
Relationships with Others: What Can We Learn About Them From C.G. Jung?
5 consecutive Mondays, 7:00–8:40 pm
Beginning February 25, 2019
Instructor David Rottman, MA
Fulfilling relationships are “Extroverted Individuation” according to C.G. Jung. In this course we will explore what Jung meant by that statement, as well as his many other helpful ideas (and the ideas of his pupil, Marie-Louise Von Franz) about the nature of both conscious and unconscious connections between people.
Spring II: Beginning April 8, 2019
Trauma and the Healing Power of the Image
5 consecutive Mondays, 6:00–7:40 pm
Beginning April 8, 2019
Instructor Gary Brown, LCSW, LP
Religion and, later, psychoanalytic work addressed the reality of trauma in human life. Some of the early foci of the newly discovered and developed psychotherapy were “shell shock” and hysteria. At the heart of this was psyche, the mysterious function which develops images from the pains and pleasures of life and allows meaning to happen. We will explore what Jung discovered: that images contain and hold affect, the experience of feeling or emotion.
The Art of C.G. Jung
5 consecutive Wednesdays, 6:30–8:10 pm
Beginning April 10, 2019
Instructor Maria Taveras, LCSW
Inspiration for this course derives from the book The Art of C.G. Jung, which documents the full extent of Jung’s creative imagination as a visual artist. It comprises examples of Jung’s visual art both before and after The Red Book and includes essays that situate Jung’s artistry in the context of modern art. The Art of C.G. Jung will be required reading in this course, and participants will also apply their own creative imagination by doing hands-on, in-class art exercises under the guidance of the instructor.
Revisioning Jungian Theory: A Reading Seminar
5 consecutive Wednesdays, 7:00–8:40 pm
Beginning April 10, 2019
Instructor Harry W. Fogarty, PhD
We will read together Warren Colman’s Act and Image-The Emergence of Symbolic Imagination, along with a critical commentary on Colman’s approach, in an effort to refresh and intensify our understanding of archetypal theory and Jungian process. We shall engage how symbols come to be and function for us as individuals in community.
Note: This course is held at 305 West 107th Street, Suite N.
Sacrifice and Individuation
5 consecutive Thursdays, 6:30–8:10 pm
Beginning April 11, 2019
Instructor David Walczyk, EdD, LP
In this class, we seek to answer the question, what is the relationship between sacrifice and living the process of individuation? Participants are encouraged to consider their relationship to sacrifice and its purpose in their individuation and in the individuation of those they care about. With a firm grounding in the history and fundamentals of sacrifice and individuation, we will consider how that relationship manifests itself in our time: first, collectively in the wellness industry and then personally in clinical practice.
Upcoming Tuesday Lunch Forums
Images of Coniunctio in Christiana Morgan's Visions
Tuesday, March 5, 2019: 12:30 – 1:30 pm
A First Tuesday Lunch Forum presented by Ilona Melker, LCSW.
Jung's Vision Seminars are based on the manuscripts of his and Christiana Morgan. Jung did not address in the seminars that the direction of the visions was moving toward coniunctio, the uniting of the masculine with the feminine as opposites. Our visual explorations will be some unexplored images of coniunctio in the manuscripts that Jung did not touch upon.
Upcoming Workshops
Falling Apart and Coming Together: Addressing the Pain of Trauma Using Art Based Approaches
Saturday, February 23, 2019:
9:30 am– 4:30 pm
A day-long workshop led by Paula Howie, ATR-BC, LPC, LCPAT
Contact hours: 6 CE contact hours for Licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists for this program.
This session will focus on the history of trauma with an emphasis on the Intensive Trauma Therapy (ITT) approach created by Drs. Linda Gantt and Louis Tinnin from their work in the 1980s and 1990s. The ITT intervention is an art-focused approach. It is designed to treat the common clusters of trauma-based problems, including eliminating intrusive and arousal symptoms, and reducing avoidance and numbing symptoms without the person reliving the trauma. The presentation will cover the theoretical basis of the approach and will include lecture, personal experiential, and representative case materials.
The Red Book: An Encounter with Jung's Words and Images
Saturday, March 30, 2019:
9:30 am– 4:30 pm
A day-long workshop led by Sanford L. Drob, PhD
Contact hours: 6 CE contact hours for Licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists for this program.
This workshop will provide an introduction to Jung's Red Book (Liber Novus) and a meditation upon a selection of Jung's painted images. Our primary goals will be to understand the relevance of The Red Book to personal growth, the psychotherapeutic process, and the pursuit of life-meaning. We will examine the Red Book in the context of Jung's earlier and later works, his personal crisis in relationship to Freud, and the work's place in the history of ideas. Amongst the topics to be considered: meaning and the absurd, chaos and order, the death of the inner hero, masculine and feminine, shadow and persona, good and evil, reason and unreason, sanity and madness, "accepting all," God and self, and the guidance of one's soul.
Natural Cycles, Natural Symbols: Individuation as Ecology
Saturday, April 13, 2019:
9:30 am– 4:30 pm
A day-long workshop led by Melanie Starr Costello, PhD
Contact hours: 6 CE contact hours for Licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists for this program.
By aligning psycho-spiritual maturation with the natural process, our program envisages individuation as a path that embraces the inextricable relationship between life and death principles and assents to Creation as mystery. We will confront dominant cultural constructs that alienate us from the body and obstruct psyche's connection with the non-human world. In hope of redress, we construct an alternative model of consciousness, envisaging a nature-based-symbolic attitude that reconnects us with our roots in nature, conjoining mind, soul, and cosmos.
We will discuss the varied archetypal energies that inform our identities and chosen place in the world. We consider: what is the purpose of longevity? What is wisdom? We conclude by reconstructing our portrait of the individuated person, elucidating the nature-based dimensions of social, family and spiritual life.
Inner Authority: Its Definition and Its Development
Saturday, May 4, 2019:
9:30 am– 4:30 pm
A day-long workshop led by Julie Bondanza, PhD
Contact hours: 6 CE contact hours for Licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists for this program.
Sociologists describe three types of authority: legal/rational, which is based on enacted rules and regulations such as in government or other established institutions; traditional, which is based on long established cultural patterns; and charismatic authority, which is based on a person’s ability that can inspire devotion and obedience. But in this workshop we will focus on the development of inner authority through which we can become and stand for who we truly are. We will use myths, fairy tales, dreams and personal experience to elaborate this idea.
Quadrant
New Issue of Quadrant Published
Vol XLVIII:1 Spring/Summer 2018
Articles include:
• Window Shades and Bad Guys: Dreamscapes of Transformation in the Face of War
— Robin B. Zeiger
• Miss Frank Miller: Jung's Sherpa from Alabama
— Samuel L. Ryals
• The Living Skeleton: A Depth Psychological Study of Anorexia Nervosa based on C.G. Jung's Complex Theory
— Casey J. Winter
• Soul and Spirit from a Psychological Perspective
— Paul Ashton
• Tropes of Trackings, Tropes of Traps
— Craig Canfield
• In Memoriam: Erel Shalit, PhD
— Kathryn Madden, Nancy Swift Furlotti, Robin B. Zeiger
Reviews by Kevin J. Foley and Jane Selinske.
• Book Reviews
— Hilda Seidman, Deborah Howell, John Romig Johnson
28 East 39th Street, New York, NY 10016 | Tel: (212) 697-6430 | info@cgjungny.org
About
The C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology, founded in 1962, is dedicated to helping men and women grow in conscious awareness of the psychological realities in themselves and society, find healing and meaning in their lives, reach greater depth in their relationships, and live in response to their discovered sense of purpose. The Foundation is located in its mid-Manhattan brownstone, which it shares with the other institutional members of the C.G. Jung Center.
We welcome the public to our extensive program of lectures, seminars, courses, symposia, and workshops. Our bookstore offers for sale a wide selection of books on analytical psychology and related subjects, and our journal Quadrant offers interesting and accessible articles and reviews on analytical psychology.
The work of the C.G. Jung Foundation is made possible by the generosity of its members.
Please support our important activities with your contribution.
Board of Trustees
Jane Selinske, President
Julie M. Bondanza, Vice President
Rollin Bush, Treasurer
Anne Ortelee, Secretary
Harmar Brereton
Joanne Bruno
Teresa Cintron
Melanie Starr Costello
Sara E. Gil-Ramos
Heide M. Kolb
Ann Walle
David Weiss
Janet M. Careswell, Executive Director
jcareswell@cgjungny.org
Bailey Anderson Webmaster
Our activities include:
• Presenting an educational program on various aspects of Jungian thought, from the fundamentals of analytical psychology to the processes of social and cultural unfolding.
• Offering continuing education courses, workshops, discussion forums, and conferences.
• Offering seminars for professionals in the field of mental health, in cooperation with the C.G. Jung Institute of New York.
• Encouraging and disseminating research, discourse, and writing on analytical psychology, archetypal symbolism, and related areas of Jungian thought.
• Publishing Quadrant: The Journal of the C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology, and other materials such as tapes of lectures and symposia.
• Providing a book service, encompassing a bookstore and a mail-order service.
• Cooperating and collaborating with other Jungian organizations on projects of mutual importance.
• Administering the C.G. Jung Center building.