LECTURES, COURSES, WORKSHOP
Public Programme 2011-2012
- 2011: September | October | November | December
- 2012: January | February | March | April | May | June
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NEW ONLINE PAYMENT FOR EVENTS
The season you can pay online for member fees and Foundation events via PayPal. PayPal is the most secure and commonly used international payment process. You DO NOT have to be a PayPal subscriber, but can simply use a major credit card. If you pay online a week or more in advance of the event, you will receive the discounted price as shown below. If you prefer offline payment (by telephone or cheque), you can still receive the early discount if your payment is received a week or more in advance.
We hope this year's rich program and the pricing changes will encourage your participation. Please contact the office if you have questions.
2011
“Borderland consciousness,” a term originated by Jungian analyst Jerome Bernstein, describes the psychic space where the “overly rational western ego is in the process of re-connecting with its split-off roots in nature.” When we dream, or have fantasies of wild animals, plants or unleashed elemental forces such as water or fire, we are stepping into that realm of the psyche. More and more frequently images from the “Borderland” are coming into the consulting room to address that space between the modern technological ego and the natural world that contains and nurtures us. The talk will include stories and myths from the Inuit people, as well as clinical material. It will be illustrated with excerpts from John Houston’s Inuit documentaries: Nuliajuk (Sedna) and A Diet of Souls.
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Each of us has a special gift for attunement with nature. These gifts may come through a dream, some creative work, or an experience in wilderness. They may take the form of animals, plants, stones, waters, etc. The workshop is designed to discover our place between the rational mind and nature so that we may become more adept at practicing “Borderland consciousness.” Bring something to the workshop that embodies a special experience of nature. Also, bring a drum, a cushion, and comfortable clothing. (Extra drums will be provided.)
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Please come by the Foundation office for refreshments and to get to know other available members, staff and OAJA analysts. You can, if you wish, obtain a membership for the year. Feel free to browse the Fraser Boa Library and, if you're a member, to borrow from the collection. Browse the Word & Image Bookstore. Get the inside scoop on some of this year's events. This social event will increase your acquaintance with the friendly faces attending future Foundation events. All are most welcome to come – particularly new and prospective members – and there is no charge, although donations are always welcome! Registration is not required, but if you could let the office know you're coming, that would help us for catering purposes.
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Feb. 29, Mar., 28
The poet translates the archetypal image into language that touches us in the present moment and thereby “makes it possible for us to find our way back to the deepest springs of life” (CW15, par. 130). In The Poetry Corner, we will ponder the riches contained in various poems that speak to our hearts.
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The Jesus face at the bottom of the well of history was a liberal Protestant theologian for Harnack and an aged hippie for the Jesus Seminar. Where numinosity is at play, withdrawing the projections is no easy task.
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The day starts with a long list of things to accomplish; we have barely time to write down a dream, let alone explore it, then we are out of the door ready to perform our tasks in the outside world. In a life of doing rather than being, how can we be present to our inner life and honor its needs? How can we learn to breathe through life rather than “catch our breath” before moving on to the next thing to do? How can we learn to remain in our body?
This seminar will explore the body-mind-spirit connection. It will offer restorative yoga (gentle stretches that can be done sitting or lying down on a mat), breathing exercises as well as short meditation sessions. These exercises will be interspersed with moments of self-reflection and self-discovery. The seminar will also present some of C.G. Jung’s writings on the body-mind-spirit connection.
Please wear loose, comfortable clothing.
Elisabeth Pomès is a certified yoga instructor (Kripalu Center, Massachussetts) as well as a Jungian Analyst.
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This season we will continue reading Jung's "The Symbolic Life" (CW18). For more details, please contact Schuyler Brown at 416-241-5002.
New members are most welcome.
Literature offers a wealth of opportunities to investigate divisive gender issues, paternalism, and religious doctrine. We will examine the medieval idea of women as an “idealized object” through Dante’s influences on Italian poets and writers, and the liberalizing Muslim influences of the Spanish court of 1360. These literary motifs and affects are aligned to our own biased sex/gender/social assumptions, typed attitudes, and an essentialist reasoning that must integrate a differentiating Jungian consciousness. Although contributing to the shifting currents of modern day contrasexual/eros psychology, the numinous autonomy of these charged narratives often resist real change.
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A series examining fundamentals of Jungian psychology through the medium of film.
Nov. 6: Individuation (Pomès)
In Central Station a cynical, joyless woman crosses paths with a lonely boy who is looking for his father. Together, they go on a long journey into places geographically and psychologically unknown to them. Themes found in the movie relating to the individuation process include meeting with the shadow, answering the call, dealing with crisis, the manifestation of the transcendent, the renewal through the child archetype and the theme of sacrifice: finding the treasure and letting it go.
Nov. 26: Shadow & Anima (Jackson)
A look at Bernardo Bertolucci’s stunning 1970 film, The Conformist, set in fascist Italy. A bourgeois man, terrified of his own shadow, adopts a heartless persona modelled on the masculine ideal promulgated by Mussolini, which falters only as he falls under the sway of a beautiful, charismatic woman.
Jan. 15: Animus (Pomès)
In Notorious, Alice Huberman (Ingrid Bergman), the American daughter of a convicted Nazi spy, is recruited by government agent T. R. Devlin (Cary Grant) to infiltrate a group of Germans who have relocated to Brazil. The animus figures that Alice meets range from loving to utterly dangerous. A discussion will follow on the theme of the animus and its manifestations both in the movie and in real life. Limit: 15-20 participants.
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An exploration of the cross-cultural imagery and symbolism of the Devil, and its psychological import.
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This season we will continue reading Jung's "The Symbolic Life" (CW18). For more details, please contact Schuyler Brown at 416-241-5002.
New members are most welcome.
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LOCATION CHANGE:
Seeley Hall, Trinity College, 6 Hoskin Ave
The pain of mourning and heartbreak is neurologically similar to being subjected to torture. There seems to be only one way to end that agony, and to limit somatic damage: neurobiology calls it an "evolutionary jump" and Jungians call it the process of individuation. The good news is this: if you love, your heart should be broken at some point or other in your life. If not, your love may remain the innocent love of a child.
Ginette Paris will discuss how the process of individuation includes heartbreak, and propels one beyond limbic attachments. She will also discuss how the basic ideas of Jungian psychology are supported by recent findings in neuroscience.
Dr. Paris is a psychologist, therapist and author of many books, among which is: Wisdom of the Psyche: Depth Psychology after Neuroscience (Routledge 2007). Her books have been translated into many languages. She is core faculty at the Pacifica Graduate Institute in Santa Barbara, California, and Research Consultant in the Somatics Program.
In the film The Mother, May, a woman in her 60’s, is catapulted into a painful crisis of individuation when her husband dies. Unable to go on, she is faced with the challenge of transcending her sense of herself – and the life she has built around it – in order to “live forward.” In this seminar we will consider The Mother, written by Hanif Kureishi and directed by Roger Michel, in segments, pausing to reflect on May’s experiences as her process unfolds. We will explore the conflicts – both inner and outer – that manifest as the transgressive stirrings of new life begin to disturb the habitual order of her world and she encounters previously split off aspects of her own psyche. In the particulars of this woman’s journey toward greater vitality and wholeness, we will discern some of the archetypal patterns and motifs common to the individuation process in the second half of life, including the issue of sacrifice with no guarantees of how the future will unfold.
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“It’s a lot like work,” they say. Drudgery, toil, and ‘slogging it out’ all depict grueling aspects of labour where no love is lost. But is it a precondition that it really isn’t work unless you would rather be doing something else? What is it about the idea of work that makes us pine for vacation and retirement or find ourselves stuck in self-defeating cycles of procrastination and avoidance? How is it that some people love what they do, while others work themselves to death, and yet others become freeloaders or gold diggers?
Exploring various Jungian concepts—the psychological ‘opus,’ alchemical work and creative work among others—this lecture will sweat out the inner workings of work, which after the day is done is a psychological notion. Perhaps somewhere between all work and all play we can discover a psychological work that offers more than the same old grind.
This work-shop continues the explorations of the Friday night lecture by turning the focus on individual experience. Participants will be encouraged to bring images and stories that relate to their own personal encounters with work, livelihood, procrastination … or any other love-hate encounters with the daily grind.
Along with group exercises this workshop will delve into other expressions of work that include film clips and stories that will add to our understanding and relationship to the psychological ‘opus.’
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This season we will continue reading Jung's "The Symbolic Life" (CW18). For more details, please contact Schuyler Brown at 416-241-5002.
New members are most welcome.
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2012
This season we will continue reading Jung's "The Symbolic Life" (CW18). For more details, please contact Schuyler Brown at 416-241-5002.
New members are most welcome.
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More often than not, we experience dreams or fantasies of pigs, severed heads or menstrual blood as repugnant – even threatening. But if we excavate the roots of these images in ancient Celtic mythology, we encounter Cerridwen, the lunar White Sow Goddess, the rituals around kingship and the “ensouled” land, and the mead which – when imbibed – bestowed gifts of prophecy and poetic inspiration. The lecture will delve into these three motifs by way of Celtic myth, dreams from modern case material and visual art.’
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This season we will continue reading Jung's "The Symbolic Life" (CW18). For more details, please contact Schuyler Brown at 416-241-5002.
New members are most welcome.
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Mar. 31, Apr. 28
Participants will have an opportunity to work closely with dreams to see how they are put together and what they have to tell us in terms of how we live our day-to-day lives. Please bring questions.
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Pilgrimage – a sacred journey in pursuit of wisdom, healing, guidance and inspiration – is evident in all world religions and was also important in the pagan religions of ancient Greece and Rome. While pilgrims traditionally seek a specific place sanctified by association with a divinity or other holy personage, the increasing popularity of the Camino of Santiago de Compostela (150,000 pilgrims completed the 500 mile walk in 2010 as compared with only 2,500 in 1985) is marked by a growing emphasis on transformations in the self. This presentation will explore the “camino experience” from a Jungian perspective, noting parallels between the pilgrimage experience – a kinetic ritual carried out in liminal space and time – and the journey of individuation.
This season we will continue reading Jung's "The Symbolic Life" (CW18). For more details, please contact Schuyler Brown at 416-241-5002.
New members are most welcome.
Rescheduled from Oct. 29 and Jan 29
This workshop is open to all those interested in exploring the language of the body-mind. Participants will be guided through breath awareness and body sensing into a potent experience of themselves. There will be time to express the impulses and images that arise both through movement as well as drawing or painting. Please bring a mat or blanket.
Janice Skinner has been leading people through explorations in breath, sound, movement and yoga for 25 years. Her company Move into Balance creates practices for those seeking a greater relationship to themselves and daily life.