The Sacred Heritage: The Influence of Shamanism on Analytical Psychology

Author:   Donald F. Sandner ,  Steven H. Wong
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780415915168


Pages:   304
Publication Date:   09 December 1996
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Sacred Heritage: The Influence of Shamanism on Analytical Psychology


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Full Product Details

Author:   Donald F. Sandner ,  Steven H. Wong
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.560kg
ISBN:  

9780415915168


ISBN 10:   0415915163
Pages:   304
Publication Date:   09 December 1996
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Part 1 Beginnings and Meanings: The Shamanic Archetype; Chapter 1 Introduction: Analytical Psychology and Shamanism, Donald F. Sandner; Chapter 2 “What Was All that Rustling in the Woods?”: Quotes from C. G. Jung, Meredith Sabini; Chapter 3 Eliade, Jung, and Shamanism, Bradley A. TePaske; Chapter 4 C. G. Jung and the Shaman’s Vision, C. Jess Groesbeck; Chapter 5 The “Book of Knowledge” in Shamanism and Mysticism: Universal Image of the Source, Meredith Sabini; Part 2 Shamanic Medicine: Explorations in Healing; Chapter 6 An Integrated Approach to Soul Possession: Applying Shamanistic and Jungian Techniques, Steven H. Wong; Chapter 7 Shamanic States in Our Lives, Patricia Damery; Chapter 8 The Felt Vision, Jeffrey A. Raff; Chapter 9 The Clinical Use of Animals in Dreams, June Kounin; Chapter 10 Serpent Fire Arousal: Its Clinical Relevance, Louis Vuksinick; Chapter 11 The Ally, Jeffrey A. Raff; Part 3 Dark Encounters: Personal Transformations; Chapter 12 Pain and Surgery: The Shamanic Experience, Arthur D. Colman; Chapter 13 Cancer, New Age Guilt, and the Dark Feminine, Dyane Neilson Sherwood; Chapter 14 Learning to Listen: A Snake Calls Me to a Shamanic Path, Carol McRae; Chapter 15 Shamanic Dismemberment, Steven H. Wong; Chapter 16 Coyote Attends My Surgery, Norma Churchill; Chapter 17 The Dark Feminine: Death in Childbirth and Entry into the Shamanic Realm, Janet Spencer Robinson; Chapter 18 Trapped Souls: A Passage to the Spirit World, Lori Cromer; Part 4 The Numinous Web: Cultural Connections; Chapter 19 Lakota Teachings: Inipi, Humbleciya, and Yuwipi Ceremonies, Pansy Hawk Wing; Chapter 20 Buffalo Vision, Norma Churchill; Chapter 21 The Sun Dance: Wiwayang Wacipi, Steven H. Wong; Chapter 22 Renewal of the World Tree: Direct Experience of the Sacred as a Fundamental Source of Healing in Shamanism, Psychology, and Religion, Margaret Laurel Allen, Meredith Sabini; Chapter 23 Beyond Tourism: Travel with Shamanic Intent, Pilar Montero, Arthur D. Colman; Chapter 24 Firework: A Hawaiian Guidebook to the Goddess, Sara Spaulding-Phillips;

Reviews

The reader reemerges from these fascinating accounts of psychic, spiritual, and physical journey convinced of the reality of other-worlds--whether they reside in our unconscious or in a separate space-- inhabited by animal spirits and allies, gods an ancestors, and convinced too of the need (ours and theirs) to acknowledge and honor them. Unfortunately, it takes a single conversation with a dogmatically rational person to dispel this knowing, for a prevailing spell has been cast upon the lot of us that tethers us to the profane. -Julie Mayeda The Bloomsbury Review The reader reemerges from these fascinating accounts of psychic, spiritual, and physical journey convinced of the reality of other-worlds--whether they reside in our deep unconscious or in a separate space-- inhabited by animal spirits and allies, gods and ancestors, and convinced too of the need (ours and theirs) to acknowledge and honor them. -Julie Mayeda, The Bloomsbury Review September/October 1997 These are well-written essays ... Students will enjoy the volume, as will analytical psychologists interested in enriching the practice of modern therapy with elements borrowed from ancient healing traditions. - Religious Studies Review


The reader reemerges from these fascinating accounts of psychic, spiritual, and physical journey convinced of the reality of other-worlds--whether they reside in our unconscious or in a separate space-- inhabited by animal spirits and allies, gods an ancestors, and convinced too of the need (ours and theirs) to acknowledge and honor them. Unfortunately, it takes a single conversation with a dogmatically rational person to dispel this knowing, for a prevailing spell has been cast upon the lot of us that tethers us to the profane. <br>-Julie Mayeda The Bloomsbury Review <br> The reader reemerges from these fascinating accounts of psychic, spiritual, and physical journey convinced of the reality of other-worlds--whether they reside in our deep unconscious or in a separate space-- inhabited by animal spirits and allies, gods and ancestors, and convinced too of the need (ours and theirs) to acknowledge and honor them. <br>-Julie Mayeda, The Bloomsbury Review September/October 1997 <br> These are well-written essays ... Students will enjoy the volume, as will analytical psychologists interested in enriching the practice of modern therapy with elements borrowed from ancient healing traditions. <br>- Religious Studies Review <br>


The reader reemerges from these fascinating accounts of psychic, spiritual, and physical journey convinced of the reality of other-worlds--whether they reside in our deep unconscious or in a separate space-- inhabited by animal spirits and allies, gods an ancestors, and convinced too of the need (ours and theirs) to acknowledge and honor them. Unfortunately, it takes a single conversation with a dogmatically rational person to dispel this knowing, for a prevailing spell has been cast upon the lot of us that tethers us to the profane. -- Julie Mayeda TheBloomsbury Review The reader reemerges from these fascinating accounts of psychic, spiritual, and physical journey convinced of the reality of other-worlds--whether they reside in our deep unconscious or in a separate space-- inhabited by animal spirits and allies, gods and ancestors, and convinced too of the need (ours and theirs) to acknowledge and honor them. -- Julie Mayeda, The Bloomsbury Review September/October 1997 These are well-written essays ... Students will enjoy the volume, as will analytical psychologists interested in enriching the practice of modern therapy with elements borrowed from ancient healing traditions. -- ReligiousStudies Review The reader reemerges from these fascinating accounts of psychic, spiritual, and physical journey convinced of the reality of other-worlds--whether they reside in our unconscious or in a separate space-- inhabited by animal spirits and allies, gods an ancestors, and convinced too of the need (ours and theirs) to acknowledge and honor them. Unfortunately, it takes a single conversation with a dogmatically rational person to dispel this knowing, for a prevailing spell has been cast upon the lot of us that tethers us to the profane. -- Julie Mayeda TheBloomsbury Review


Author Information

The late Donald F. Sandner was a practicing psychiatrist and Jungian analyst in San Francisco. He wrote Navaho Symbols of Healing., Steven H. Wong is a Jungian psychotherapist in Denver.

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