Fall C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles W. Pico Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90064

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P U B L I C P R O G R A M S Fall 2010 C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles 10349 W. Pico Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90064 1 Phone: 310-556-1193 Fax: 310-556-2290 E-mail: office@junginla.org http://www.junginla.org

The C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles is pleased to announce our Fall Programs for 2010. The mission of Public Programs is to provide comprehensive educational programs in the theory and practice of analytical psychology to both the general public and the psychotherapeutic community. These programs are intended to explore ideas which represent the breadth of Jungian thought, as well as topics in fields of knowledge which directly relate to the ideas of Jung, such as religion, literature, and the arts. Programs are offered at the introductory, intermediate, and advanced levels to meet the needs of practicing psychotherapists as well as individuals from other disciplines who are interested in Jung's ideas. We would like to welcome back those of you who have taken courses with us before, and we look forward to meeting those of you who may be coming for the first time. Please note that you can visit our bookstore before and during the intermission of most lectures. We try to present a broad range of topics for both the clinician and the lay public. If there are other areas that you would like to see addressed, please feel free to write to us at publicprograms@junginla.org. We welcome hearing from you. Warmly, Welcome Wendy Wyman-McGinty, Ph.D. Chairperson, Public Programs The C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles is a non-profit (501-C3) organization dedicated to the study and dissemination of the views of C.G. Jung. His works focus on psychological insight, development of consciousness, and growth. To accomplish this, we offer programs to train future Jungian analysts and psychotherapists while promoting research and publications. We are also committed to community outreach through our many on-going programs which include our public programs; our adult and child clinics; our bookstore and library; our journal, Psychological Perspectives; the Remembering Jung Video Series; and the Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism. Please consider a donation as part of your annual charitable giving: www.junginla.org/t/institute/p/donation Cover: An image of a deity from the world of the spirits sits guard over a bundle of ancestral bones, which symbolizes the undecaying world of the archetypes. Sculpture from Ngunie River, Gabon, Africa. Musée de l'homme, Paris, France. Images courtesy of the Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism ARAS copyright, 2010. www.aras.org 2

Calendar of Events Sunday, Sep. 19 11:00am-2:00pm 6 Wednesdays Sep. 22, 29; Nov. 10, 17 Dec. 1, 8 7:30-10:00pm Friday, Oct. 1 7:30-9:30pm Saturday, Oct. 2 10:00am-12:30pm Libray Booksale 3 Wednesdays Oct. 6, 13; Nov. 3 7:30-9:30pm 2 Fridays Oct. 29, Dec. 3 7:30-10:00pm Friday, Oct. 8 7:30-10:00pm 2 Fridays Oct. 15, 22 7:30-9:30pm Friday, Nov. 5 7:30-9:30pm Sunday, Nov. 7 11:00am-2:00pm Friday, Nov. 12 7:30-9:30pm Friday, Nov. 19 7:30-9:30pm Sunday, Dec. 5 9:30am-4:00pm Friday, Dec. 10 7:30-9:30pm APC: The Major Arcana in Tarot Yolanda M. Robinson, Ph.D. 18 Series: Remembering Jung Various Lecturers _ 4-7 APC: Pieces of Grief Janie Ingalls, M.F.T. 18 Inner Beauty Shone under the Southern Cross Edith Sullwold Memorial Lecture Sachiko Taki-Reece, M.F.T., Ed.D. 8 Series: The Red Book / Active Imagination Various Lecturers 10-13 APC: Toni Wolff: Her Forgotten Contribution Rachel Fitzgerald, Ph.D., M.F.T. 18 Series: Love Pamela J. Power, Ph.D.; Patricia Berry, Ph.D. 14 APC: Chinese Avant-garde Art Chie Lee, M.A. 19 APC: The Shadow s Gift Robin Robertson, Ph.D. 19 APC: Rhythms of the Heart Julie Sgarzi, Ph.D. 19 Clinical Dream Incubation and Body Robert Bosnak 15 Dreams Guiding Our Way Robert Moradi, M.D. 16 Four, Part V Christophe Le Mouël, Ph.D. 17 Library Booksale 8 Jungian Psychology and Sandplay Therapy 9 Registration for all public programs may be completed via phone, (310-556-1193), or by going online to www.junginla.org/public_programs 3

A Series: REMEMBERING JUNG Series: Pre-registered: $140 Individual Classes: Pre-registered: $25 At door: $30 All levels 15 hours CE, CN available 2.5 hours CE per lecture APA, MCEP: See note on p. 23 Image: Jane Wheelwright and Suzanne Wagner Produced by Suzanne and George Wagner, the Remembering Jung series presents a warm-hearted and intimate view of Jung s prodigious creativity and humanity. Taken altogether, this series of 29 1-hour interviews offers a wealth of insights and stories illustrating the depth of Jung s discoveries and their significance in our lives. Each lecture includes a viewing of one DVD led by analysts who were deeply inspired by the person interviewed. JOSEPH WHEELWRIGHT (1906-1999) JoAnn Culbert-Koehn, L.C.S.W. Wednesday, September 22 7:30-10:00pm Joseph Wheelwright was one of the founders of the C.G. Jung Institute in San Francisco and served two terms as President of the IAAP. Come see this tall, personable, warm, and humorous man talk about his analysis with Jung, and learn why Jung sent him to work with Toni Wolff. Joe taught for many years at the University of California San Francisco Medical School, where he inspired generations of psychiatrists both Jungian and Freudian. Describe how Jungian psychology affected Wheelwright's understanding of marriage Describe how Wheelwright influenced the Freudian analytic community Describe how Wheelwright influenced the Jungian analytic community The first Analytical Psychology Club (APC) lecture will be given on September 19, 7:30-9:30pm. For the full listing of lectures presented by the APC, please consult pages 18-19. 4

JAMES KIRSCH (1901-1989) Charles Zeltzer, Ph.D. Wednesday, September 29 7:30-10:00pm James Kirsch, M.D., met Jung in 1926 and analyzed with him in a periodic way until Jung s death in 1961. Responding to the disastrous events foretold in his dreams, Kirsch moved his family out of Germany when Hitler came to power, eventually coming to the US where he, together with his wife Hilde, helped found the Jung Institute in Los Angeles. Kirsch was known for his erudition in relating Jung's findings to the fields of comparative religion, alchemy, and literature. From the lens of his personal experience of Dr. Kirsch as analyst, mentor and friend, Dr. Zeltzer will discuss Kirsch's long relationship with Jung, his approach to analysis, his scholarly background, and the dreams and visions which molded his destiny from an early age. Describe Kirsch's unique contribution to analytical psychology Give examples of dreams and visions which heralded Kirsch's destiny Describe how world events shaped Kirsch's understanding of the psyche HILDE KIRSCH (1902-1978) Harriet Friedman, M.A., M.F.T., J.A. Wednesday, Nov. 10 7:30-10:00pm Rose-Emily Rothenberg, M.A.. M.F.T. Harriet Friedman and Rose-Emily Rothenberg, who were both analysands of Hilde Kirsch, will share their memories of that experience and Hilde s contributions to analytical psychology and the Jungian community in Los Angeles. Among the topics Hilde addressed in the taped interview were one s relationship to psyche and soul, the commitment to the Self, and the need to listen to the unconscious. Hilde states: Please become conscious. Everything else is dependent on it. Describe what Kirsch meant by a commitment to the Self Illustrate how Kirsch s ideas about the Self informed her analytic practice Compare and contrast Kirsch's analytic style with current analytical thinking 5

LAURENS VAN DER POST (1906-1996) Cydny Rothe, L.C.S.W. Wednesday, November 17 7:30-10:00pm Sharon Heath, M.A. Sir Laurens van der Post, South African novelist, journalist, conservationist, war hero, political advisor, and early advocate of racial equality, wrote a much acclaimed biography of Jung, Jung and the Story of Our Time, which came out of his close friendship with Jung. Van der Post "was compelled towards the Bushmen" of the Kalahari, he said, "like someone who walks in his sleep, obedient to a dream of finding in the dark what the day has denied him." The depth and breadth of van der Post's creativity and vision made him a stirring advocate for Jungian psychology in the wider world. Describe van der Post's contribution to analytical psychology. Describe how psychological consciousness can impact our relationship with our community and the wider world. Describe what van der Post meant when he said: "when men fall asleep something like the Bushman awakes and beckons him." C.A. MEIER (1905-1995) J. Marvin Spiegelman, Ph.D. Wednesday, December 1 7:30-10:00pm Brad TePaske, Ph.D. C.A. Meier was a kind of "heir apparent" to Jung from the time of his analysis in the late 1920's until he resigned as President of the C.G. Jung Institute of Zürich in 1956. An outstanding psychiatrist and author of numerous books on basic principles of analytical psychology, Meier was sought after as an analyst who was fluent in German, Swiss German, English, Italian and French. Dr. Spiegelman, who was in analysis with Meier from 1955-1959, and Dr. TePaske who analyzed, with Meier from 1978-1982, will share personal reflections about Meier, his work and his impact on them as analysts today. Describe Meier's approach to analysis Give an example of how Meier's work has influenced contemporary analytic practice Describe similarities and differences between Meier and his colleagues 6

JOSEPH HENDERSON AT 100 (1903-2007) J. Gordon Nelson, Ph.D. Wednesday, December 8 7:30-10:00pm Joseph Henderson, co-founder of the C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco, worked with Jung in the 1930's and was a steadfast contributor to Jung's body of work until his death in 2007. He practiced analytical psychology until his retirement in 2005 at the age of 102. Author of the seminal work Thresholds of Initiation, he co-authored with Jung and von Franz Man and his Symbols. Henderson's research described archetypal processes within culture that mirror the individuation process in the context of the collective unconscious. Describe Henderson's contribution to analytical psychology. Describe how the archetypal force of a personal initiation affects a cultural perspective Discuss the psychological effect of encountering an archetype as a personal initiatory experience THE C.G. JUNG BOOKSTORE The C.G. Jung Bookstore carries a specialized inventory of books by and about C.G. Jung and other subjects related to Jungian psychology. Browsing is welcomed and the Bookstore staff is available with suggestions for particular interests and needs. An intriguing collection of cards and ethnic gift items is also available. Orders may be placed by telephone, e-mail, letter, or online. Mailing service is also available. The Bookstore is usually open preceding our programs and during breaks. Regular operating hours: Wednesday-Saturday, 12pm-5pm. BOOKSTORE EXCLUSIVE: REMEMBERING JUNG DVDS Produced by Suzanne and George Wagner, the Remembering Jung series, which contains 31 DVDs, including Matter of Heart and The World Within is $600.00, plus shipping and handling. You save $195.00 over the individual purchase price of $25 per DVD. (310) 556-1193 x228 bookstore@junginla.org www.junginla.org/bookstore 7

Edith Sullwold Memorial Lecture INNER BEAUTY SHONE UNDER THE SOUTHERN CROSS Sachiko Taki-Reece, M.F.T., Ed.D. Saturday, October 2 10:00am-12:30pm This lecture is in honor of Edith Sullwold, an advocate for the needs and understanding of the child, who traveled the globe giving presentations, workshops, teaching and consulting. Her charismatic personality led her to be well-loved wherever she went. One of the places that she visited was South Africa. Can you imagine a sandplay without the typical miniatures, or occuring in a group setting? Working in a shanty town in Johannesburg with children and adolescents at schools and play spaces, I witnessed children creating sandtrays using sand, pebbles and bottle caps. The evidence of the symbolic nature of the child's psyche was palpable, even under such conditions. Two cases will be presented, one of a 9-year-old boy and the other of a 21-year-old man, which illustrate how origins and cultural diversity can be observed in sandplay. Describe how sandplay images can demonstrate an inner psychic drive toward authentic self-expression Give an example of personal and archetypal processes in sandplay cases Describe the significance of knowing about cultural diversity in one s clinical practice Pre-registered: $40 At Door: $45 All levels 2.5 hours CE, CN available APA, MCEP: see p. 23 Fall Library Booksale! Used book sale, to benefit the Library Saturday, October 2, 2010 9am-3pm At the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles 8

JUNGIAN PSYCHOLOGY AND SANDPLAY THERAPY Advanced Courses for Practitioners Often the hands know how to solve a riddle with which the intellect has wrestled in vain. C. G. Jung Sandplay is a powerful therapeutic tool that facilitates the psyche s natural capacity for healing through the tangible emergence of personal and archetypal symbols in a free and protected space. This seven-month course will meet at the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles once a month on Saturdays from 9:00am to 12:00pm beginning in September. Each session will focus on both theoretical and practical issues of sandplay for those new to the technique and for those who desire more in-depth training. A case presentation will be given at each meeting, followed by group discussion and consultation. Coordinated by Harriet Friedman, M.A., M.F.T., J.A. and Sachiko Taki-Reece, M.F.T., Ed.D., the courses are intended for licensed practitioners, registered interns and social work associates. In addition to 24 hours of CE and APA accreditation, credit is available for ISST (International Society of Sandplay Therapy) and STA (Sandplay Therapists of America). Describe the technique of sandplay therapy Demonstrate how sandplay therapy contributes to affect regulation Discuss the relationship between Jungian theory and the practice of sandplay therapy Enrollment is limited and early online registration is recommended. Partial scholarship may be available. Cost: $480.00 + $35 (materials) www.junginla.org/education/sandplay_course 9

A Series: THE RED BOOK / ACTIVE IMAGINATION Series: Pre-registered: $110 Individual Classes: Pre-registered: $25 At door: $30 All levels 10.0 hours CE, CN available 2 per lecture APA, MCEP: See note on p. 23 In The Red Book, Jung carefully recorded his personal explorations of the psyche in colorful, intense graphic images, accompanied by his introspective reflections written in calligraphic script. Jung developed his technique of active imagination over many years, believing that the unconscious could make itself known through creative expression. In this series, we will explore aspects of The Red Book, focusing specifically on the role of active imagination. Please note: the October 29 lecture will conclude at 10:00pm. FANTASIES, DREAMS, AND VISIONS: JUNGIAN PSYCHOLOGY AND THE RED BOOK Paula Smith-Marder, Ph.D. Wednesday, October 6 7:30-9:30pm C.G. Jung called The Red Book the prima materia for a lifetime s work. This elaborate journal formed the genesis for much of Jung s Collected Works. After considering the events which led Jung to preserve his explorations in this valuable form, we will trace several of his seminal ideas as they appear in fantasies throughout the pages of The Red Book, such as archetypes, active imagination, the shadow, individuation, and the transpersonal self. Describe the significance of The Red Book as it relates to C.G. Jung s later writings throughout the Collected Works Describe Jung s method of active imagination which facilitates greater consciousness 10

THE IMAGE: A MIRROR OF THE PSYCHE Marion Anderson Wednesday, October 13 7:30-9:30pm Jung's Red Book, with its intense psychic imagery, illuminates our understanding of the unconscious in a unique way. For Jung, images represent a means of communicating information and expressing emotion as well as a bridge between consciousness and the unconscious. In this lecture we will investigate the importance of the image in the context of analytical psychology. Describe historic, cultural and personal aspects of the image Describe Jung s understanding of the role of image in the individuation process PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES Psychological Perspectives is a unique journal with a strong foundation in the arts, whose mission is to promote greater consciousness by honoring and amplifying the psychology of C.G. Jung. Psychological Perspectives offers a broad view and publishes a wide range of articles, from depth psychology to science, politics to philosophy, as well as fiction, poetry, and current book, video, and film reviews. Each issue is a feast not only for the mind but for the eye as well, filled with art that flows from the cover through the articles. The September issue In a Certain Land, guest-edited by Charles Zeltzer, Ph.D., will be on fairy tales. A special issue focusing on Jung s Red Book, released in December 2010. It will complete the 2010 season. www.junginla.org/words&images/psychological_perspectives 11

IN JUNG S FOOTSTEPS: ACTIVE IMAGINATION OUR INNER GUIDE Gilda Frantz, M.A. Friday, October 29 7:30-10:00pm This lecture is in celebration of the 100th birthday of Kieffer E. Frantz, M.D., co-founder of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles. Dr. Frantz established the first Jungian clinic in the world which offered analysis on a sliding scale basis, and served as its Director for over 20 years. After his death, the clinic was named in his memory. Steven J. Frank, Ph.D., current Director of the Kieffer E. Frantz Clinic, will give the opening remarks. In The Red Book, Jung lays bare his inner world through illustrations of his dreams, fantasies and active imagination. In this lecture, we will explore some of the ways in which images from the unconscious can begin to emerge, enabling the building of a relationship between the ego and the Self, bringing a sense of integration to the personality. Describe Jung's theory of active imagination Describe the historical significance of The Red Book THE KIEFFER FRANTZ CLINIC Established as the first clinic in the world offering Jungian analysis on a sliding-fee scale, the Kieffer Frantz Clinic bears the name of its founder and first director. Licensed by the State of California Department of Health Services, the Kieffer E. Frantz Clinic provides Jungian analysis and psychotherapy to adults unable to afford the standard fees of private practice. Services also include couples counseling and family therapy. Clinic therapists include Jungian analysts, licensed psychotherapists in the analyst training program, and field placement interns working under supervision. Therapists are highly qualified and carefully selected. www.junginla.org/clinic/kfrantz_clinic For more information, please call the Institute or visit our website. Application form can also be found on our website. 12

PSYCHE AND NATURE: THE CALL OF THE WILD Steven Galipeau, M.A., M.Div. Wednesday, November 3 7:30-9:30pm Towards the end of his life, Jung wrote, I have followed the call of the wild, the age old trail through secluded wildernesses where a primitive human community may be found. Archie Belaney, an Englishman who immigrated to Canada in the early 20th century, took on the half Native American alter-ego of Grey Owl, becoming a leading environmental writer and speaker. In this lecture we will examine Jung s love of nature and Grey Owl's efforts to save the beaver from extinction, and extend this theme to the wolf, exploring both animals role in helping maintain a balanced ecosystem, as they sit on the brink of extinction. Discuss Jung s relationship to nature and its crucial role in his life Analyze the fate of the beaver and the wolf as reflective of our cultural attitudes to nature THE RED BOOK AND TWO ESSAYS Brockton Hill, J.D., M.A., M.F.T. Friday, December 3 7:30-9:30pm In "Two Essays on Analytical Psychology," comprising Volume 7 of The Collected Works, Jung sets out the essential core of his psychology. The first essay, originally titled "New Paths in Psychology," was published in 1912, the year prior to the confrontation with the unconscious that led Jung to create The Red Book. The second essay, "The Structure of the Unconscious," was published in 1916, after the storm of 1913 and 1914 had passed. This talk will focus on the changes in Jung's point of view which derive from his experience of the unconscious as recorded and described in The Red Book. The original texts of the two essays can be found in an appendix to Volume 7 of The Collected Works. Describe what led Jung to create The Red Book Describe the changes in Jung's view of the unconscious 13

A Series: LOVE Series: Pre-registered: $45 Individual Classes: Pre-registered: $25 / At door: $30 All levels 4 hours CE, CN available / 2 per lecture APA, MCEP: See note on p. 23 LOVE AND VIOLENCE Pamela J. Power, Ph.D. Friday, October 15 7:30-9:30pm This presentation will explore the paradoxical relationship between two fundamental human qualities: the capacity to love and the capacity to be violent. While we may wish to believe, in the best of worlds, that love and violence are mutually exclusive, violence as a shadow aspect of love can actually enhance and even make possible the capacity for deep and genuine human love. Illustrative examples will be drawn from films and clinical material. Describe psychological ideas about love and violence Describe ways in which violence is an inherent component of mature love A HOLE IN THE HEART: WHY WE FAIL AT LOVE Patricia Berry, Ph.D. Friday, October 22 7:30-9:30pm During the past century, depth psychology, evolutionary theory, and modern science have all attempted to unravel the mystery of love. Yet marriages and partnerships continue to break up, and the divorce rate climbs. Using illustrations from the Upanishads of the East, Homer's Hymn to Aphrodite, and Virgil's Aeneid, as well as contemporary film, this lecture will explore what makes love so difficult, why we so often fail at love, and what these failures may be asking of us on a personal as well as an archetypal level. Describe how identification, acting out and splitting serve as sexual defense Describe backgrounds for destructive behavior in relationship 14

CLINICAL DREAM INCUBATION AND BODY: THEORY AND DEMONSTRATION Robert Bosnak Friday, November 19 7:30-9:30pm Records show that of the hundreds of medical treatments offered from 500 B.C. to 500 A.D., only dream-based medicine was ubiquitously practiced throughout this entire period. In this presentation we will explore a way of working with dreams in which a particular issue is intentionally somatised so that it can be experienced more acutely in the body of the dreamer. The material derived from the responding dreams, when worked in an embodied fashion, creates a powerful healing response. Individual Lectures Describe the role of imagination in understanding dream material Illustrate how somatization can serve to amplify dream material Pre-registered: $25 At Door: $30 All levels 2 hours CE, CN available APA, MCEP: see p. 23 THE MAX AND LORE ZELLER LIBRARY The Max and Lore Zeller Library is a 7,000-volume collection of books, plus journals, videos, DVDs, CDs, and audiotapes. The entire collection deals with the psychology of C.G. Jung and such related subjects as mythology, religion, fairy tales, art and literature, and alchemy. Books by Freud and other psychoanalytic writers are included, as well as special sections on the psychotherapy of children and on the use of the sandplay technique. Recent additions to the library include the Remembering Jung DVD series as well as copies of Jung s Red Book. The library, the only one of its kind in the city, serves the Jungian professional community and the general public as well. (310) 556-1193 x229 library@junginla.org www.junginla.org/words&images/zeller_library 15

DREAMS GUIDING OUR WAY Robert Moradi, M.D. Sunday, December 5 9:30am-4:00pm 12:30pm-2:00pm Break Bring Your Own Lunch The majority of our dreams are in the service of maintaining our psychological balance and physical well-being. These dreams are often in response to our current life situations, and if made conscious, can help us navigate daily life. Less frequently, we are given dreams intended to guide us through difficult turning points in our lives, which may determine our professional, interpersonal, and spiritual paths. The theoretical bases for understanding the symbolic language of dreams, as well as the archetypal healing potential of such dreams will be discussed using examples from the amplification of dream images. Recognize the symbolic language of dreams Describe the process of dream amplification Identify dreams which are in the service of maintaining psychic balance in the dreamer Describe how dreams can be understood in the context of the dreamer's current life situation Identify dreams which point to particular turning points in the dreamer's life Differentiate compensatory dreams from those intended to guide the dreamer Pre-registered: $60 At Door: $65 All levels 5 hours CE, CN available APA, MCEP: see p. 23 16

FOUR, PART V: A REFLECTION ON THE WHOLENESS OF NATURE Christophe Le Mouël, Ph.D. Friday, December 10 7:30-9:30pm In this last part, we will investigate the symbolism of the quintessence. In Greek mythology, the fifth essence is aether and it was believed to be the pure essence where the gods lived and which they breathed. Jungian analyst Joseph Henderson once expressed the idea that the number five is a symbol of man in his relation to the divine. This reflection will illustrate with personal dreams how the process of individuation progressively reveals the presence of an organizing center in man, which Jung called the Self. A brief review of Parts 1-4 will be included at the beginning of the lecture. Describe how the symbol of the quintessence manifests in the individuation process Describe the relationship of the quintessence with the concept of the Self Pre-registered: $25 At Door: $30 All levels 2 hours CE, CN available APA, MCEP: see p. 23 THE HILDE KIRSCH CHILDREN S CENTER The Hilde Kirsch Children's Center (HKCC) is the first and only Jungian Children's Center in the United States. It was founded in December 1978, at the request of one of C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles founding analysts, Hilde Kirsch. Since its inception, analysts and candidates have treated child and adolescent patients in the Institute s clinic, providing sliding scale, low fee Jungian therapy to children in the Los Angeles area. Treatment modalities such as Sandplay, art therapy, play therapy, and dream work are provided. www.junginla.org/clinic/hkirsch_children_center For more information, please call the Institute or visit our website. Application forms can also be found on our website. 17

The Analytical Psychology Club THE MAJOR ARCANA IN TAROT Yolanda M. Robinson, Ph.D. Sunday, September 19 11:00am-2:00pm Arcanum means mystery. The twenty-two cards that form the Major Arcana in Tarot can be used as keys to open the mysteries of our own self, as blueprints of the energies, roles, archetypes and myths that define us, as well as tools for personal transformation. In divination, the Majors are often used as portals to access the invisible world of our Guides and Teachers. We will be using the Rider-Waite- Smith (RWS) deck for our presentation. Please bring your own decks. Please bring a sack lunch. Fruit, snacks, and beverages will be provided. Limited Enrollment. Pre-registered: $50 At Door: $55 PIECES OF GRIEF Janie Ingalls, M.F.T. Friday, October 1 7:30-9:30pm Grief is a soul wound that often escapes language and expression. As it opens a door to the unconscious, we may become flooded by the death aspects of the Great Mother. We need help to recollect ourselves in a conscious and lifeaffirming way. We need a life preserver in the sea of mourning, and an anchor of hope. As a form of active imagination, collage can mirror our grief and provide us the means to connect to the transformative powers of the Self. As we search for, cut out, paste together, and review images of the personal and archetypal experiences of loss, something healing may emerge, perhaps even our own rebirth. Pre-registered: $25 At Door: $30 TONI WOLFF: HER FORGOTTEN CONTRIBUTION Rachel Fitzgerald, Ph.D., M.F.T. Friday, October 8 7:30-10:00pm In the early days of depth psychology's discoveries, Toni Wolff, President of the Analytical Psychology Club of Zürich, lectured on women's individuation. In this lecture we will re-examine the dynamism of her system and the stability of her four structural forms as a means of understanding some of the ways in which interior images of relationship emerge and become constellated during adult life.the relevance of Toni Wolff's schema, and the questions it raises regarding women's sexual freedom and social roles, will also be discussed. Pre-registered: $25 At Door: $30 18

CHINESE AVANT-GARDE ART: BODY AND SPIRIT IN A STRUGGLE FOR CULTURAL IDENTITY Chie Lee, M.A. Friday, November 5 7:30-9:30pm After the repressive period of China s Cultural Revolution ended in the 1970 s, an explosion of creative energy in artistic expression began, which later had a great impact in both the national as well as the international art world. The art was often provocative and shocking. The Cultural Revolution has now moved from the political arena to the art world. We will look at the art of at least two contemporary Chinese artists as a reflection of how their individuation processes parallel the shift towards modernity in the Chinese collective psyche. Pre-registered: $25 At Door: $30 THE SHADOW S GIFT: FIND WHO YOU REALLY ARE Robin Robertson, Ph.D. Sunday, November 7 11:00am-2:00pm "Someone who is brave enough to withdraw all his projections...has succeeded in shouldering at least an infinitesimal part of the gigantic, unsolved social problems of our day" C.G. Jung, Psychology & Religion, Par.140 The shadow is the great gift for growth provided by the psyche. This presentation will deal with why the shadow appears; the wisdom of the shadow; hidden personalities; evil and the shadow; the shadow in the world around us; and integrating the shadow. Honor the shadow, as it is in many ways the first face that the Self presents to us. Pre-registered: $50 At Door: $55 RHYTHMS OF THE HEART: SYZYGY IN BODY AND PSYCHE Julie Sgarzi, Ph.D. Friday, November 12 7:30-9:30pm The human heart, a miraculous four-chambered mandala, manifests the continual interplay of opposites in its rhythmic dance of contraction and expansion systole and diastole. The beating heart, in a sustained rhythm that pushes outward and draws inward, is the central syzygy pairing of opposites on which our life depends. The speaker will explore the innate wisdom of the heart as imaged in dreams, myth, poetic imagination and alchemy and as a symbol of transformation and wholeness. Pre-registered: $25 At Door: $30 19

C. G. Jung Institute Presenter Biographies Marion Anderson is a Clinical Psychologist licensed in Brazil and a Jungian Analyst living in Los Angeles. A teaching member of the International Society for Sandplay Therapy, she first specialized in Painting Therapy in Germany. She is an Associate Member of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles. Patricia Berry, Ph.D., is a Zurich-trained Jungian analyst in private practice West Bath, Maine. She is the author of Echo s Subtle Body: A Contribution to Archetypal Psychology and numerous articles. In 1991, she was the first scholar-in-residence at Pacifica Graduate Institute. She lectures internationally and has served as president of the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts as well as the New England Society of Jungian Analysts. Robert Bosnak is a Dutch Jungian psychoanalyst and diplomate of the C.G. Jung Institute of Zürich, who trained in Zurich, Switzerland from 1971 to 1977. He has pioneered a technique of dreamwork that focuses on Jung s technique of active imagination and his studies of alchemy. He is the author of A Little Course in Dreams, which has been translated into 12 languages. JoAnn Culbert-Koehn, L.C.S.W., is a Jungian analyst in private practice with adults and children in Santa Monica. She is a recent past President of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles, where she has also served as Director of Training and Co-Director of the Hilde Kirsch Children s Center. She has published and lectured in the U.S., Mexico, and Europe on issues of separation and birth trauma. She serves as a board member of the Frances Tustin Memorial Trust and is a member of the Executive Committee of the International Association of Analytical Psychology. In 2006 JoAnn received the Distinguished Educator Award from the Federation for Psychoanalytic Education. Steven J. Frank, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist and Jungian analyst in private practice in West Los Angeles. He is the Director of the Kieffer E. Frantz Clinic at the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles and former Director of the Hilde Kirsch Children s Center. Gilda Frantz, M.A., is a Jungian analyst in Santa Monica. She is a Board Member of the Philemon Foundation. Past President of the Jung Institute of Los Angeles, she has lectured internationally, served on many Jung Institute Boards, and is founding Editor and Co-Editor in Chief of the journal Psychological Perspectives. Her main areas of interest have been the creative process and active imagination. She is the widow of Kieffer E. Frantz, M.D., founder of the Kieffer Frantz clinic. Harriet Friedman, M.A., M.F.T., J.A., is a Jungian analyst in private practice in West Los Angeles. She is a founding member of Sandplay Therapists of America, a member of the International Society of Sandplay Therapy, and former Director of the Hilde Kirsch Children's Center. Co-author of Sandplay: Past, Present, and Future and author of Supervision of Sandplay Therapy, she lectures frequently on Sandplay and Jungian psychology. Steven Galipeau, M.A., M.Div., is a Jungian Analyst in private practice in Calabasas, California, and the Executive Director of the Jungian-oriented Coldwater Counseling Center in Studio City. A faculty member and lecturer at the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles, Steve makes frequent sojourns into the forests of Sequoia National Park and Sequoia National Monument. 20

Sharon Heath, M.A., is a Jungian analyst in private practice in Los Angeles and teaches courses on the creative process. A past associate editor of Psychological Perspectives, she was guest editor of the special issue The Child Within/The Child Without. Brockton Hill, J.D., M.A., M.F.T., is a Jungian analyst in private practice in West Los Angeles and Pasadena. Before becoming a Jungian analyst, he practiced law for twenty years as a corporate and banking attorney. He has lectured on the relation between Jungian psychology, the Tarot and the Kabbalah, on the myths of Ariadne and Medea in connection with feminine development, on psychological astrology, and on the psychology of finance. Christophe Le Mouël, Ph.D., holds a doctorate in theoretical physics and did research in particle physics. He has lectured in Spain and Australia on synchronicity and the relationship between physics and Jungian psychology. Most recently, his article and Summer 2008 lecture, Spirit into Matter: Exploring the Myth of Science, was published in Psychological Perspectives (52:1): Chaos and Creativity. He is currently the Executive Director of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles. Robert Moradi, M.D., is a board-certified psychiatrist and Jungian analyst in private practice in Santa Monica. Former Director of Training at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, and Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at UCLA School of Medicine, he teaches a year-long course on dreams at the Reiss-Davis Child Study Center and at the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles. J. Gordon Nelson, Ph.D., is a Jungian analyst and a clinical psychologist in Santa Monica. He has taught the Collected Works Reading Program as well as many individual courses on Jung. He served as the President of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles and Chairperson of its Certifying Board for new analysts. Pamela J. Power, Ph.D., is a Jungian analyst and a clinical psychologist with a private practice in Santa Monica. She is past Clinic Director and past Director of Training at the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles. Cydny Rothe, L.C.S.W., is a Jungian analyst in private practice in Pasadena and on the faculty of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles where she was instrumental in initiating the Tavistock Group Relations method into the training program at the Institute. She has given dream workshops and talks on film from a Jungian perspective. Of mixed background, she has a long-standing interest in how the gifts of other cultures can augment our own cultural predispositions. Rose-Emily Rothenberg, M.A., M.F.T., is a Jungian analyst practicing in Pacific Palisades and is on the faculty of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles. She is the author of The Jewel in the Wound. Paula Smith-Marder, Ph.D., is a Jungian analyst and clinical psychologist in private practice in Westwood. She is on the faculties of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles and the UCLA Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. She is currently Co-Director of Training at the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles, and lectures frequently on women s dreams and animal imagery in dreams. 21

J. Marvin Spiegelman, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist and graduate of the C.G. Jung Institute of Zurich (1959) and has been practicing, teaching and writing in Los Angeles since then. He has written and edited some twenty books on psychology, religion and transference. Sachiko Taki-Reece, M.F.T., Ed.D., is a Jungian analyst and faculty member of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles and a teaching member of the International Society of Sandplay Therapy. Sachiko has published Sandplay research articles and book chapters in English and Japanese. Brad TePaske, Ph.D. is a Zurich-trained Jungian analyst, and a clinical psychologist in private practice in Los Angeles and Pacific Palisades. He has worked extensively on issues of sexual abuse and domestic violence. Brad is an accomplished graphic artist and a scholar of Gnosticism and Graeco-Roman mystery religions. He is the author of Rape and Ritual: A Psychological Study and Sexuality and the Religious Imagination. Charles Zeltzer, Ph.D., is a Jungian analyst practicing in Brentwood and Ventura, California. Former Director of Training of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles, Charles has lectured both nationally and internationally on various issues related to the religious function of the psyche and alchemy. The Analytical Psychology Club Presenter Biographies Rachel Fitzgerald, Ph.D., M.F.T., is in private practice in Berkeley and Sacramento. She served on the original faculty of CAPT composing and piloting their offerings on spirituality and type. Rachel has worked for 10 years in South America using Q Sorts and Wolff's individuation schema with men and women. Janie Ingalls, M.F.T., is a candidate in control stage at the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles. She has been in private practice for 19 years in Huntington Beach. Janie has a special interest in how the body speaks for the unconscious through illness, addictions, creative expression and meaningful accidents. Chie Lee, M.A., is a Jungian analyst with a private practice in West Los Angeles and Beverly Hills. She is the current President of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles. Robin Robertson, Ph.D., is a Jungian-oriented clinical psychologist, with roots in psychology, science, business, and the arts. Author of eight books in psychology, he serves as a writer and General Editor for Psychological Perspectives, as well as a Consulting Editor and contributor for the journal Cybernetics & Human Knowing. Yolanda M. Robinson, Ph.D., holds a doctorate from UCLA. She has completed (and has been certified for) the thirteen-year curriculum in Christian Qabalah and Holy Tarot from the Builders of the Adytum, a Western mystery school. In 2008, she received a Master s Degree in Transformational Psychology from the University of Philosophical Research in Los Angeles, where her thesis focused on the use of tarot as an alchemical tool for personal transformation. Julie Sgarzi, Ph.D., holds a doctorate in depth psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute. She is a Buddhist practitioner and a long-time student of Jungian psychology. Dr. Sgarzi is a board member of the OPUS Archive and Research Center and is also a Director of the Philemon Foundation. 22

Continuing Education The C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles Institute is CE, APA approved. Nursing: The C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles is an accredited provider approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing (Provider #07986). Registered Nurses may claim only the actual number of hours spent in the educational activity for credit. Psychologists: The C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. The C.G. Jung Institute maintains responsibility for this program and its content. Please see the individual program for the number of CE credits awarded for each course. Full attendance is required for psychologists to receive credit. In accordance with APA guidelines, partial credit will not be awarded. Psychologists report directly to the MCEP using the certificates of attendance awarded at the completion of the course. Clinical Social Workers and MFTs: The C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles is an accredited provider for continuing education credits for LCSWs and MFCCs/MFTs (provider # PCE 318). Please see the individual program for the number of CE credits awarded for each course. These courses meet the qualifications for continuing education credit for MFTs and/or LCSWs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences. Only the actual number of hours spent in the educational activity may be claimed for credit. Administration: (310) 556-1193 To reserve a seat for an event, please visit our website, or register over the phone with a credit card. Please be sure to give us a phone number or an e-mail address so we can notify you if a program is cancelled or there is a change of location. Please note also any special disability needs at the time of registration. Discounts: Fees for full-time students and seniors (60 or over) will be $5 less than listed in the programs unless otherwise specified. Please present a copy of your I.D. to be eligible for the reduced tuition. Refunds: One half of your registration fee is refundable if your cancellation in writing is received two weeks prior to the event (except for long-term courses where additional restrictions may apply). CE processing fee: There is an additional $10 processing fee for each continuing education course taken for credit. Administration: (310) 556-1193 x222 office@junginla.org 23 Hours: Mon.-Fri., 9am-5pm Bookstore: (310) 556-1193 x228 Hours: Wed.-Sat., 12-5pm bookstore@junginla.org Library: (310) 556-1193 x229 Hours: Wed., Fri., Sat., 12-5pm library@junginla.org Fax: (310) 556-2290 Web: http://www.junginla.org

10349 W. Pico Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90064 (one block east of Beverly Glen) See our Public Programs at: http://www.junginla.org Tel: 310-556-1193 Public Programs Fall 2010 NON-PROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE PAID Permit No. 31777 Los Angeles, CA 24