Nathan Schwartz-Salant, Murray Stein and several other Jungian analysts review Liminality and Transitional Phenomena in psychoanalysis.
Volume Includes:
Murray Stein, The Muddle in Analysis
Robert L. Moore, Ritual, Sacred Space, and Healing: The Psychoanalyst as Ritual Elder
James A. Hall, The Watcher at the Gates of Dawn: The Transformation of Self in Liminality and by the Transcendent Function
Florence Wiedemann, Liminality and Animus in Blue Velvet
Michael Eigen, Winnicott's Area of Freedom: The Uncompromiseable
Lena B. Ross, Transitional Phenomena in Clinical Practice: The Toad Is Always Real
August J. Cwik, Active Imagination as Imaginal Play-Space
Robert H. Hopcke, On the Threshold of Change: Symbolization and Transitional Space
J. Marvin Spiegelman, The Interactive Field in Analysis: Agreements and Disagreements
Ellen Y. Siegelman, Playing with the Opposites: Symbolization and Transitional Space
James Wyly and Susan Grandy, "The Shipwrecked Sailor" A Middle Kingdom Parable of Liminality and Transformation
SERIES EDITORS:
Murray Stein, Ph.D. is a supervising training analyst and former president of The International School of Analytical Psychology in Zurich, Switzerland (ISAP Zurich). His most recent books include Outside Inside and All Around, Minding the Self and The Principle of Individuation. From 2001 to 2004 he was president of the International Association for Analytical Psychology. He lectures internationally on topics related to Analytical Psychology and its applications in the contemporary world. He is publisher emeritus of Chiron Publications and is the focus of many Asheville Jung Center online seminars.
Nathan Schwartz-Salant, Ph.D. is a Jungian analyst, trained in Zurich, Switzerland. He is the author of numerous books, including The Borderline Personality: Vision and Healing, Narcissism and Character Transformation, and The Black Nightgown: The Fusional Complex and the Unlived Life as well as the co-editor of the Chiron Clinical Series. He is the director of the Foundation for Research in Jungian Psychology.