An Encyclopedia of Archetypal Symbolism: The body

An Encyclopedia of Archetypal Symbolism: The body

Author: Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism

Publisher:

Published: 1991

Total Pages: 480

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The first volume of An Encyclopedia of Archetypal Symbolism was a stunning collection of color images and text organized around mythic themes that follow the solar calendar from cosmos and creation to death, transformation, and rebirth. In this second volume, the focus is the human body as a carrier of deep psychological insights and sacred meanings. Whether idolized or abused, the body is the object of much fascinated attention, even obsessive preoccupation, in the contemporary Western world. What has been missing from our culture's preoccupation is an appreciation of the body's organs as symbols of the deepest contents of the human psyche. This book surveys the richness of meaning found in a wide range of beautiful sacred images from the world's traditions and explains what the symbolism of our physical form teaches us about the inner realities of our consciousness, spirit, and divine essence.


An Encyclopedia of Archetypal Symbolism

An Encyclopedia of Archetypal Symbolism

Author: Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism

Publisher: Shambhala Publications

Published: 1997

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781570622502

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The first volume of An Encyclopedia of Archetypal Symbolism was a stunning collection of color images and text organized around mythic themes that follow the solar calendar from cosmos and creation to death, transformation, and rebirth. In this second volume, the focus is the human body as a carrier of deep psychological insights and sacred meanings. Whether idolized or abused, the body is the object of much fascinated attention, even obsessive preoccupation, in the contemporary Western world. What has been missing from our culture's preoccupation is an appreciation of the body's organs as symbols of the deepest contents of the human psyche. This book surveys the richness of meaning found in a wide range of beautiful sacred images from the world's traditions and explains what the symbolism of our physical form teaches us about the inner realities of our consciousness, spirit, and divine essence.


An Encyclopedia of Archetypal Symbolism

An Encyclopedia of Archetypal Symbolism

Author: Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism

Publisher: Shambhala Publications

Published: 1991

Total Pages: 540

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

A superbly produced book of full-page color photographs of artworks and artifacts, accompanied by interpretive commentaries by historian of religions George R. Elder, Ph.D., plus bibliographies and index. The works of art are arranged thematically in chapters focusing on particular body parts that are the symbolic objects of art and ritual. This illuminating book is certain to become a valued source of pleasure and insight for a wide range of readers.


The Wounded Body

The Wounded Body

Author: Dennis Patrick Slattery

Publisher: SUNY Press

Published: 2000-01-01

Total Pages: 316

ISBN-13: 9780791443828

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Explores the wounded body in literature from Homer to Toni Morrison, examining how it functions archetypally as both a cultural metaphor and a poetic image.


The Book of Symbols

The Book of Symbols

Author: Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism

Publisher: Taschen America Llc

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 807

ISBN-13: 9783836514484

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Offers photograph illustrations and essays on numerous symbols and symbolic imagery, exploring their archetypal meanings as well as cultural and historical context for how different groups have interpreted them.


Meinrad Craighead

Meinrad Craighead

Author: Meinrad Craighead

Publisher: Pomegranate

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 364

ISBN-13: 0764924540

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This extensively illustrated volume collects the varied, powerful work of Meinrad Craighead, an artist whose images find their beginnings in her Catholic roots (she was a nun for fourteen years) as well as in the traditions of Southwest Native American Culture, in which she has immersed herself since moving to New Mexico twenty years ago.Craighead has devoted her life to contemplation, prayer, and art. Her images are both figurative and abstract; she works in both black-and-white and color. Animals figure prominently in her work, as do dream figures and the artist herself in various manifestations. Oftentimes her images relate journeys she has taken, either on this earth or in waking or sleeping dreams. Many times, her paintings are accompanied by her own telling of these stories, and as a writer, Craighead has the ability to move us as deeply as her images do.This retrospective conveys Craighead's enormous body of work over the past forty years. It is a tribute to an important visionary, a fine artist, and an inspiring life. Essays by Rosemary Davies, a writer who first met Craighead at Stanbrook Abbey; Virginia Beane Rutter, a Jungian analyst and the author of Embracing Persephone and Celebrating Girls; and Eugenia Parry, an art historian and the author of numerous books and essays about art and photography, discuss Meinrad Craighead's work with subtlety and insight.


The Snake and the Rope

The Snake and the Rope

Author: Elder

Publisher: Dog Ear Publishing

Published: 2012-04

Total Pages: 368

ISBN-13: 1457508788

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

While there are many psychological monographs on Hinduism, no work has surveyed the history of that tradition in a sustained way. Thus, The Snake and the Rope: A Jungian View of Hinduism breaks new ground both for religious studies and for psychology. Trained on both sides of the argument, the author of this work is uniquely qualified to elucidate what, for example, the Vedic hymns meant to the people who composed them and what they might mean for us today. He shows us what karma means for Hindus and what Jung says it canmean for us. We learn how Jungians use the term "Self" that Jung borrowed from the Upanishads and how it is the same and different in its new, modern context. The reader will witness a red thread of "goddess worship" from earliest India to Classical Hinduism. Jung says the modern equivalent is devotion to the collective unconscious deep within ourselves. Having served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in a Thai village in the late 1960's, George R. Elder returned to the States to earn a Ph. D. in Buddhist Studies from Columbia University. He subsequently taught Comparative Religions at Hunter College (City University of New York) and would co-chair the Religion Program for several years. In 1989, Dr. Elder and his family relocated to Florida. He trained to become a Jungian analyst and maintains a professional relationship with the C.G. Jung Study Center of Southern California. His works include The Body: An Encyclopedia of Archetypal Symbolism in collaboration with ARAS (Shambhala, 1996). He recently co-edited An American Jungian: In Honor of Edward F. Edinger(Inner City, 2009).


Eranos

Eranos

Author: Hans Thomas Hakl

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2014-09-11

Total Pages: 734

ISBN-13: 1317548124

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Every year since 1933 many of the world's leading intellectuals have met on Lake Maggiore to discuss the latest developments in philosophy, history, art and science and, in particular, to explore the mystical and symbolic in religion. The Eranos Meetings - named after the Greek word for a banquet where the guests bring the food - constitute one of the most important gatherings of scholars in the twentieth century. The book presents a set of portraits of some of the century's most influential thinkers, all participants at Eranos: Carl Jung, Erich Neumann, Mircea Eliade, Martin Buber, Walter Otto, Paul Tillich, Gershom Scholem, Herbert Read, Joseph Campbell, Erwin Schrodinger, Karl Kereyni, D.T. Suzuki, and Adolph Portmann. The volume presents a critical appraisal of the views of these men, how the exchange of ideas encouraged by Eranos influenced each, and examines the attraction of these esotericists towards authoritarian politics.


Head and Heart

Head and Heart

Author: Mary Storm

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2015-08-12

Total Pages: 430

ISBN-13: 1317325575

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

An extensive study of self-sacrificial images in Indian art, this book examines concepts such as head-offering, human sacrifice, blood, suicide, valour, self-immolation, and self-giving in the context of religion and politics to explore why these images were produced and how they became paradigms of heroism.