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  1. Journal of Analytical Psychology
  2. Year: 2011 Volume: 56
  3. Year: 2011 Volume: 56 Issue: 5
  4. Jung's shadow: negation and narcissism of the Self.
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Year: 2017 Volume: 62
Year: 2016 Volume: 61
Year: 2015 Volume: 60
Year: 2014 Volume: 59
Year: 2013 Volume: 58
Year: 2012 Volume: 57
Year: 2011 Volume: 56
Year: 2011 Volume: 56 Issue: 5
What is The Red Book for analytical psychology?
Healing the wounds of our fathers: intergenerational trauma, memory, symbolization and narrative.
Fifteen minute stories about training.
The grandfather.
Jung's shadow: negation and narcissism of the Self.
Faint voices from Greenwich Village: Jung's impact on the first American avant-garde.
Year: 2011 Volume: 56 Issue: 4
Year: 2011 Volume: 56 Issue: 3
Year: 2011 Volume: 56 Issue: 2
Year: 2011 Volume: 56 Issue: 1
Year: 2010 Volume: 55
Year: 2009 Volume: 54
Year: 2008 Volume: 53

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Jung's shadow: negation and narcissism of the Self.

Content Provider World Health Organization (WHO)-Global Index Medicus
Author Meredith-Owen, William
Abstract The cave walls of prehistoric man record two contrasting hand impressions: the one positive - a direct imprint; the other negative - a blank defined by a halo of colour. Jung's disturbed, displaced contact with his mother led to a struggle in establishing an integrated sense of 'I'; instead to create a sense of Self he brilliantly contrived to illuminate the darkness around that blank impress. The resulting lifework, enhanced by Jung's multifarious capacities as artist and philosopher as well as physician, is deeply impressive; yet Winnicott (1964) in his review of Memories, Dreams, Reflections (1963) nevertheless alludes to Jung's 'own need to search for a self with which to know' (p. 450). Passages from the autobiography are considered that appear to corroborate Winnicott's contention that Jung had a 'blank', potentially psychotic, core. Yet it is also argued that the psychoanalytic mainstream has undervalued the subtlety and creativity of Jung's own intuitive response to his shadow and that a sympathetic appreciation of this can still valuably inform our contemporary approaches to narcissistic disorders, especially dissociation.
File Format HTM / HTML
ISSN 00218774
Issue Number 5
Volume Number 56
e-ISSN 14685922
Journal Journal of Analytical Psychology
Language English
Publisher Wiley
Publisher Date 2011-11-01
Publisher Place Great Britain (UK)
Access Restriction One Nation One Subscription (ONOS)
Subject Keyword Discipline Psychology Ego Jungian Theory History Narcissism Psychoanalysis Book Reviews As Topic History, 19th Century History, 20th Century Humans Biography Historical Article Journal Article
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
Subject Clinical Psychology
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