C.G. Jung Institute
of New York

28 East 39th Street
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212-986-5458
E-mail

We are now accepting applications for analytic training


spacer The C.G. Jung Institute of New York offers a post-graduate clinical training program to prepare qualified persons for a professional practice in Jungian analysis. It is designed to meet the requirements for New York State licensure as a Psychoanalyst. The Institute also promotes and encourages research to advance the field of analytical psychology and, in collaboration with the New York Association for Analytical Psychology, the Association for graduate analysts, offers continuing education and jointly sponsors the C.G. Jung Referral Service, which provides referrals and supervised clinical experience to candidates. To encourage research and the dissemination of new ideas, the Institute publishes The Journal of Jungian Theory and Practice, a peer-reviewed journal that is distributed free to all American Jungian analysts, candidates, and interested professionals.

The Training Program aims to graduate an analyst with personal and professional competence in both theory and clinical practice. Throughout training, the candidate will engage in personal analysis, supervised clinical practice and small classes that approach analytic work from a broad perspective. The curriculum provides an intensive study of the theories and practice of C.G. Jung and his followers, along with contemporary Jungian thought. Analytical psychology is studied in the context of an evolving psychological field wherein basic assumptions about human nature are critically assessed and applied to clinical theory and methods of practice.

The basic training philosophy, institutional policies, and teaching methods are geared towards open dialogue and critical discussion within a small class structure. The teaching and supervising faculty at the Jung Institute is distinguished with extensive clinical experience in psychoanalysis and backgrounds from a variety of disciplines.

In addition to experienced resident faculty, internationally known analysts also come to the Institute to present on the latest developments in analytical psychology. Among these have been James Astor, John Beebe, Ashok Bedi, Jerome Bernstein, Jean Shinoda Bolen, Joan Chodorow,  Beverly and Austin Clarkson, Michael Conforti, Mary Dougherty, and James Hillman.

In order to learn more about training for Jungian analysis in New York, please visit the admissions and curriculum pages on this site. If you are interested in pursuing Jungian psychoanalysis (Jungian analysis) in New York, please visit the C.G. Jung Referral Service page.
 

Founding Mothers:

An Event Honoring the Four Women Doctors

Who Introduced Jung's Analytical Psychology to the United States

Saturday, March 31, 2012

9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

This day-long conference will present the lives and work of Doctors Beatrice Hinkle (1870-1953), Kristine Mann (1873-1945), Eleanor Bertine  (1887-1967), and Esther Harding (1888-1971), the pioneer analysts who brought Jung's new theories and methods of clinical practice to New York in the early 20th century.  Lectures by Jay Sherry, Beth Darlington, Christopher Beach, and Polly Armstrong will describe the history of the vibrant founding mothers who established the traditions that shape the programs sponsored today at New York's Jung Center.

Writing in 1915 to explain her reasons for translating Jung's first major work into English, Beatrice Hinkle affirmed her belief that "humanity is seeking a new message, a new light upon the meaning of life" and "something tangible . . . with which it can work towards a larger understanding of itself and its relation to the universe."  For her, Jung's work demonstrated that "every individual is to a large extent the determiner of his own destiny," and holding that conviction and following his guidelines, she and her early colleagues set out to claim their destinies with courage and imagination.  Today we follow in their footsteps.  

The Analytical Psychology Club, the Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism, the C.G. Jung Foundation, the C.G. Jung Institute, and the New York Association for Analytical Psychology join together to sponsor this event, held at the C.G. Jung Center, 28 East 39th Street, New York City.

The cost of the conference is $60.00.  Register by making out a check to the C.G. Jung Foundation of New York and sending it to "Founding Mothers," C.G. Jung Foundation, 28 East 39th Street, New York, New York, 10016.  Seating is limited, so please reserve your space as soon as possible.

The Presenters:

Jay Sherry, Ph.D., on Beatrice Hinkle.

Jay is an independent historian of psychoanalysis and a member of the Board of the C. G. Jung Institute of New York.  His book Carl Gustav Jung: Avant-Garde Conservative (Palgrave MacMillan) won a 2011 Gradiva Award.  He is currently writing on the life and work of Beatrice Hinkle.

Beth Darlington, Ph.D., on Kristine Mann.

Beth is a Professor of English at Vassar College and a licensed and certified Jungian analyst with a private practice in Poughkeepsie, New York.  A member of the New York Association for Analytical Psychology, she teaches at the C. G. Jung Institute of New York and New York's Jung Foundation. Her publications and lectures include work on the English Romantic poets, mythology, fairy tales, and Jungian psychology.

Christopher Beach, J.D., on Eleanor Bertine.

A Jungian analyst in Portland, Maine, Chris works with both individuals and dream groups. He is a member of the New England Society of Jungian Analysts and of the Ethics Committee of the International Association for Analytical Psychology. His course offerings include: "Confronting Difficult Ethical Dilemmas in Analysis," "Psychological Types," and "Dream Work." He is writing a book about psychological types from a depth perspective.

 Polly Armstrong, Ph.D., on Esther Harding.

           Polly is a Jungian analyst and clinical psychologist, who recently retired from 30 years of private practice in Washington, D.C., and now lives on the coast of Maine.  She served as director of education for the Jungian Analysts of Washington Association and for nine years was president of the Washington Society for Jungian Psychology.  She is currently a member of the New York Association for Analytical Psychology and the Jungian Analysts of Washington Association. 

 


 

 
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