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Hidden Treasure - The Heroine's Journey
The Heroine's Journey: Woman's Quest for Wholeness by Maureen Murdock This was a best-seller for us in the late 1980s. Maureen recognized that the "Hero's Journey" that Joseph Campbell had written about so memorably missed important aspects of the process for women. The fan mail poured in for this book that spoke so profoundly to -
Hidden Treasure - Ego and Archetype
Ego and Archetype: Individuation and the Religious Function of the Psyche by Edward F. Edinger If you've heard C. G. Jung's ideas are good for you, but you're put off by the sheer volume of his work, try looking at him through this marvelous lens provided by the late Dr. Edward Edinger. He takes Jung's -
Hidden Treasure - Personality Type
Personality Type: An Owner's Manual by Lenore Thomson If you've ever taken the Myers-Briggs Type Inventory (MBTI) and gotten your result (INFJ? ESTP?), you probably read the description of your type and moved on. Few know that the MBTI is actually based on ideas of personality typology developed by C. G. Jung. This book fleshes -
Hidden Treasure - Unholy Hungers
Unholy Hungers: Encountering the Psychic Vampire in Ourselves and Others by Barbara E. Hort Did you ever have a friend, colleague, or lover who seemed to, inexplicably, drain the spirit right out of you, leaving you depleted of energy, ideas, and focus? You may be the victim of a psychic vampire! Psychotherapist Hort shows that -
Hidden Treasure - A Guided Tour to the Collected Workks or C.G. Jung
A Guided Tour of the Collected Works of C. G. Jung by Robert Hopcke When people get their heads rearranged by Jung--sometimes after reading his Man and His Symbols-it often instills in them a craving for more writings of the founder of analytical psychology. But they hit a roadblock: Jung's Collected Works run to more -
Hidden Treasure - Individuation in Fairy Tales
Individuation in Fairy Tales by Marie-Louise von Franz Here's another one from the days when we published extensively in Jungian psychology-and it's arguably one of the best. Von Franz was likely Jung's closest student, and her insights into how fairy tales can tell us who we are can be world-view transforming.
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