African Americans and Jungian Psychology
Leaving the Shadows

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Language: English

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African Americans and Jungian Psychology
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· 15.6x23.4 cm · Hardback

Approximative price 89.97 €

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African Americans and Jungian Psychology
Publication date:
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Paperback

African Americans and Jungian Psychology: Leaving the Shadows explores the little-known racial relationship between the African diaspora and C.G. Jung?s analytical psychology. In this unique book, Fanny Brewster explores the culture of Jungian psychology in America and its often-difficult relationship with race and racism.

Beginning with an examination of how Jungian psychology initially failed to engage African Americans, and continuing to the modern use of the Shadow in language and imagery, Brewster creates space for a much broader discussion regarding race and racism in America. Using Jung?s own words, Brewster establishes a timeline of Jungian perspectives on African Americans from the past to the present. She explores the European roots of analytical psychology and its racial biases, as well as the impact this has on contemporary society. The book also expands our understanding of the negative impact of racism in American psychology, beginning a dialogue and proposing how we might change our thinking and behaviors to create a twenty-first-century Jungian psychology that recognizes an American multicultural psyche and a positive African American culture.

African Americans and Jungian Psychology: Leaving the Shadows explores the positive contributions of African culture to Jung?s theories and will be essential reading for analytical psychologists, academics and students of Jungian and post-Jungian studies, African American studies, and American studies.

Foreword by Polly Young-Eisendrath. Introduction. 1. Jung’s Early America: Racial Relations and Racism 2. The Reality of Racial Chains and the Myth of Freedom 3. American Racial Black and White Complexes 4 Africanist Traditions and African American Culture 5. African Archetypal Primordial: A map for Jungian psychology 6. Archetypal Grief of African American Women 7. The Jungian Shadow 8. The Dreamers of Saint Elizabeth Hospital 9. African American Cultural Consciousness and the Jungian Collective 10. The Promise of Diversity 11. Summary: Healing through an Africanist Perspective. Index.

Postgraduate and Professional

Fanny Brewster, Ph.D., is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York and Professor of Psychology at Pacifica Graduate Institute. She is a member of the Association of Black Psychologists and the Philadelphia Association of Jungian Analysts, and has been twice nominated for the Gradiva Award for her nonfiction writing.