A Dream in the World: Poetics of Soul in Two Women, Modern and MedievalPsychology Press, 2003 - 260 pages How can science and religion co-exist in the modern discipline of psychotherapy? A Dream in the World explores the interfaces between religious experience and dream analysis. At the heart of this book is a selection of dreams presented by the author's patient during analysis, which are compared with the dreams of Hadewijch, a thirteenth century woman mystic. The patient's dreams led the modern woman to an unanticipated breakthrough encounter with the divine, her "experience of soul". The experience reoriented and energized her life, and became her "dream-in-the-world". Following Jung's idea that the psyche has a religious instinct, Robin van Loben Sels demonstrates that the healing process possible through psychotherapy can come from beyond the psyche and can not be explained by our usual theories of scientific psychology. Written in flowing, easily-read language A Dream in the World details a classical Jungian analysis of a woman's dreams, and searches the relationship between religious encounter, psyche and soul. |
Table des matières
Acknowledgements | 1 |
Religious experience and the body | 11 |
Theoretical approaches to mystical experience | 21 |
The dreamer and her dreams | 54 |
Snowy mountains two children | 67 |
Ordeal by spiders | 68 |
Twoness beneath the ocean | 73 |
Artichoke dream | 76 |
The solar tree | 116 |
Hands holding the Earth | 118 |
Cowlick and reentry | 119 |
Experience of soul | 126 |
Psychological commentary | 148 |
Selfdirective dreams and initiation | 150 |
Personification personalisation and indwelling | 156 |
Winnicotts personalisation and indwelling | 158 |
Lightning strike | 79 |
Silver fish kiss | 81 |
Burning stone | 88 |
Three angels | 91 |
On the beach naked woman fiery skin | 93 |
Four colors | 94 |
Buddha with a globe | 95 |
Statue of a woman | 97 |
21 | 98 |
Swami B is dancing | 99 |
Rose dream | 101 |
Bird with jeweled wings | 105 |
White elephant on a white sea | 107 |
Selfbirth | 110 |
The lunar tree | 111 |
Beyond personalisation to personhood | 161 |
Reflections on psyche and soul | 164 |
Limitations of Winnicotts view of religion as necessary illusion | 165 |
Hadewijchs paradox | 174 |
Hadewijch and the Beguines | 176 |
Literary contributions | 182 |
Beguine spirituality | 183 |
Mysticism and the body | 185 |
Hadewijch and the feminine | 193 |
Soul and selftransformation | 196 |
Summary and conclusions | 204 |
| 227 | |
| 247 | |
| 249 | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
alchemical angel anima anima mundi Anthropos archetypal artichoke aspect awareness become beginning Beguines birth bodily body Buddha called capacity chakra church collective collective unconscious color dark depths describes dimension divine dream-in-the-world earth embodied emerge emotional Erich Neumann everything experience of soul experienced feeling feminine mode Feminine Presence flaming angel Franz fully human consciousness Hadewijch happens healing heart Holy Spirit idea imagery imagine individual indwelling Jung Jung's Kali Kundalini language light living Mairi felt Mairi's dream Mairi's experience Mairi's Self-directive dreams mandala meaning mind Mommaers mother Muladhara mystery nature numinous pain paradoxical passionate perhaps personalisation personhood psyche psyche and soul psychic psychological psychotherapy quantum mind quantum stance reality realization refers relationship religious experience religious instinct self-other sense soul's abyss space spiders stone suggests symbol tells therapy things thought transformation tree unconscious understanding vision whole Winnicott woman words writes yoga
