Brochure (pdf format) - C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles
Transcription
Brochure (pdf format) - C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles
PUBLIC PROGRAMS Fall 2012 C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles ■ 10349 W. Pico Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90064 Phone: 310-556-1193 ■ Fax: 310-556-2290 ■ E-mail: office@junginla.org ■ http://www.junginla.org WELCOME The C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles is pleased to announce our Fall Programs for 2012. 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 look forward to hearing from you. Warmly, Wendy Wyman-McGinty, Ph.D. Chairperson, Public Programs REGISTRATION for all public programs, including Analytical Psychology Club programs, may be completed online at www.junginla.org/public_programs or by phone at 310-556-1193 x 221. For extended biographies of the presenters, learning objectives, or to sign up to receive our weekly newsletter, please visit our website. The C.G. Jung Bookstore is usually open preceding our programs and during breaks. 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. Please consider a DONATION as part of your annual charitable giving: www.junginla.org/donate Administration: Bookstore: Library: (310) 556-1193 x222 (855) 556-1196 (310) 556-1193 x229 Hours: Mon.-Fri., 9am-5pm Hours: Wed.- Fri., 12-5pm Hours: Wed., Fri., Sat., 12-5pm Cover image from the Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism, www.aras.org The Descent of the Holy Spirit (Pentecost). 2 office@junginla.org bookstore@junginla.org library@junginla.org rograms, C3) organization ANNUAL BOOK SALE TO BENEFIT THE ZELLER LIBRARY Saturday, September 29 9:00am-2:00pm ADVANCED SANDPLAY CLASS FOR PRACTITIONERS Harriet Friedman, M.A., M.F.T. Saturdays, September 29, October 13 9:30am-2:00pm Sachiko Taki-Reece, Ed.D., M.F.T. 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 advanced seminar in sandplay therapy is designed for clinicians who are interested in exploring, or already utilizing, this non-verbal expressive method in their clinical practice. We will also explore how one can utilize sandplay for one's own personal growth and individuation process. Please bring your lunch. Enrollment limited. Pre-registered: $160 + $20 (material fee) 8 hours APA, CE, CN available Two workshops on dreams UNDERSTANDING YOUR DREAMS Robert Moradi, M.D. In addition to suggested readings, this class will focus on the dreams of the participants. Since most dreams can be understood in the context of the dreamer's life, maintaining confidentiality is expected. Realizing that there is an overlap between the educational aspect of a class and the therapeutic value of understanding of one's dream, the expectation is that the process of reviewing, amplifying, and interpreting dreams will provide a model for how to approach working with dreams both personally and in a clinical setting. WORKSHOP FOR CLINICIANS ONLY Wednesdays, October 10, 24; November 7, 28; December 12; January 9, 23; February 6 10:00am-11:45am Enrollment limited Pre-registered: $190 / At Door: $200 CEUs: 14 hours APA, CE, CN available WORKSHOP FOR GENERAL PUBLIC, PART II Wednesdays, October 17, 31; November 14; December 5, 19; January 16, 30; February 13 10:00am-11:45am Priority will be given to those who took part I. Early registration strongly recommended. Enrollment limited Pre-registered: $190 / At Door: $200 CEUs: 14 hours APA, CE, CN available A workshop on dreams in San Luis Obispo THE WAY OF THE DREAM John Dobbs, Ph.D. Saturdays, October 13, November 10, December 8, January 12, February 9, March 9 9:30-11:30am Dreams reveal a profound relationship between our inner and outer states of being, giving unique insights into the depths of the human mind. The late Dr. Marie-Louise von Franz, Jung’s intellectual heir, was perhaps the foremost expert on the explication of dream states, and her timeless comments continue to stir and transform those who study them. Each two-hour session of this course will feature two excerpts from her film series The Way of the Dream, followed by discussion and enhancement of topics raised in the excerpts. Enrollment limited Location: 200 Suburban Road, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401 Series: Pre-registered: $125 (Instructor’s Office) Individual Classes: $25 12 hours APA, CE, CN available, 2 per class 3 A lecture co-sponsored by the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles PSYCHOANALYSIS AND SOCIETY IN TIMES OF GLOBAL CRISIS Andrew Samuels Saturday, October 6 9:00-3:00pm What is the role of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy in relation to political problems and processes? How might Western societies move from financial sadism to relational economics? Is there a spiritual and political dimension to psychological experience? What happens to people deprived of these aspects of experience? Is there a role for politics in the clinical space? Dr Samuels will discuss these contemporary events in light of their clinical, historical and psychological significance. This event is co-sponsored by The Los Angeles Institute and Society for Psychoanalytic Studies, the Ernest S. Lawrence Trauma Center, The American Association for Psychoanalysis in Clinical, Social Work, The Uprooted Mind Committee, and the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles. Continental Breakfast provided. Please bring your lunch. Location: New Center for Psychoanalysis, 2014 Sawtelle Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90025 Please check our website for fee and enrollment details. OPEN HOUSE: ANALYST TRAINING PROGRAM Sunday, October 7 2:00-4:30 pm Refreshments, Brief Presentations, Questions, and Discussion with Analysts and Candidates. The C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles invites you to join us at our Open House. We will be presenting the Analyst Training Program and the Nine Month Program for Licensed Psychotherapists. We will also introduce our Psy.D. Degree Program available to graduates of the Analyst Training Program. The library and bookstore will be open. Please RSVP by September 27, 2012 to Priscilla, 310 556-1193 ext. 222. A lecture and book-signing BION & BEING: PASSION AND THE CREATIVE MIND Annie Reiner, Ph.D. Sunday, October 14 10:00am-1:00pm (Author, Bion and Being: Passion and the Creative Mind) Bion's concept of "O" represents his most mysterious and revolutionary idea of the mind, something akin to the creative mind, and to artistic, religious, and mystical states. "O" can be conceived of as a state of being, a sense of mental presence or existence, based on an experience of mental integration between the emotional and rational functions of the mind. Drawing from the work of artists, poets, writers, theologians, and philosophers, this talk will focus on how to facilitate an experience of emotional understanding, utilizing clinical and dream material. Pre-registered: $40 / At Door: $45 3 hours APA, CE, CN available An afternoon workshop THE FOUR SEASONS: AN AMPLIFICATION OF THE SYMBOLIC PROCESS THROUGH PAINTING Marion Anderson, M.A. Tuesdays, October 16, 23, 30; November 6, 13 12:00-2:00pm Painting is a playful means to enter into contact with oneself. It evokes the creative potential, even if the person "does not know how to paint." In this workshop, designed for non-painters, the emphasis will be on experiencing one's inner images, with the goal of allowing them to make themselves known through the concrete process of painting on paper. We will focus on the four seasons, often not fully experienced in Los Angeles but still part of our collective unconscious. We will dedicate each week to one season and the last week we will review the series of painted images and their personal and collective meaning. Art materials will be provided. Enrollment is limited. Pre-registered: $120 10 hours APA, CE, CN available 4 ation to political ill discuss these d psychological ion between the al understanding, Edith Sullwold Memorial Lecture A LOOK AT INFANT OBSERVATION: THERAPIST EXPERIENCES AND CLINICAL APPLICATIONS WITH CHILDREN, ADOLESCENTS, AND ADULTS JoAnn Culbert-Koehn, L.C.S.W. Saturday, October 20 10:00am-1:00pm Susan Frankel, Ph.D. Shirley A. Gooch, R.N., Ph.D. Infant observation allows the therapist an opportunity to examine the dynamics between mother/caretaker and the infant. It also provides a window into the observer's understanding of his/her own infantile psyche. In this series of presentations, we will cover the history, theories, current research, and clinical applications regarding infant observation. Pre-registered: $40 / At Door: $45 3 hours APA, CE, CN available SACRED JOURNEYS LEADING TO RENEWAL Rose-Emily Rothenberg, M.A., M.F.T. Saturday, November 10 10:00am-3:00pm In Memories, Dreams, Reflections, Jung spoke about his travels to Africa, India, and other countries and the psychological insights those journeys yielded for him. Journeying both inside our psyches and outside to numinous destinations can reveal the creative energies that want to be known and utilized. In this four-hour seminar, Ms. Rothenberg will illustrate this by describing her own experience with these dynamics, including stories and myths that inspired her to undertake two African safaris. She will discuss how animal symbolism, dreams, active imaginations and visions, when integrated together with her African adventures, led her to an initiation experience and an unanticipated renewal. Please bring your lunch. Pre-registered: $60 / At Door: $65 4 hours APA, CE, CN available THE MYTH OF MEDICINE: HOW MEANING HEALS BODY Robert Bosnak Wednesday, November 14 7:30-9:30pm Asklepios, the physician god and legendary founder of Western medicine (whose adepts were called physicians), heals through a meaningful encounter in dreams. Contemporary medical science has demonstrated that a significant part of physical healing is due to the body’s direct response to perceived meaning. Drawing from the work of the Santa Barbara Healing Sanctuary, a functioning modern Asklepieion, we will examine some of the recent contributions of neuroscience which demonstrate the neurological pathways of meaning in the healing process, as well as current scientific data and case histories which examine the myth of medicine. Pre-registered: $25 / At Door: $30 2 hours APA, CE, CN available THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF LOS ANGELES is an accredited Continuing Education Units provider for Psychologists, LCSWs/MTFs and Nurses. Full attendance is required to receive credits. There is an additional $10 processing fee for each continuing education course taken for credit. 5 THE BOOK OF JONAH: MAN’S ENCOUNTER WITH THE SUBLIME Robert Moradi, M.D. Sunday, November 18 10:00am-1:00pm Jacob Zighelboim, M.D. The Book of Jonah gives voice to the powerful intra-psychic conflict that ensues when the numinous erupts into consciousness. This perplexing and unexpected occurrence is often associated with demands for attention and immediate action, which can be destabilizing to the person's day-to-day responsibilities and commitments. Our initial response to this mystical experience is often bewilderment and confusion, followed by a dedicated effort to circumvent the call to fate. Meaningful responses to the calling can be temporarily postponed, but denying it altogether is undesirable and leads invariably to enduring emotional distress and spiritual impoverishment. In the end, to find peace and inner harmony, one must find ways to integrate one’s ordinary, mundane life, with its more ethereal and trans-ordinary aspects. Pre-registered: $45 / At Door: $50 3 hours APA, CE, CN available THE HUNGER ARTIST Valérie Rubenstein von Raffay, Ph.D. Wednesday, November 28 7:30-9:30pm Respondent: Wendy Wyman-McGinty, Ph.D. This course tries to shed light on the disguised motives and conflicts of anorexia. The unique short story The Hunger Artist by Franz Kafka will be used to explore concepts of psychic retreat, the refusal of desire and human needs, and Lacan’s idea of “desire for nothing.” We will also examine some of the ways in which this dynamic relates to the archetype of the devouring mother of patients who suffer from anorexia. Pre-registered: $25 / At Door: $30 2 hours APA, CE, CN available MEDITATION, ANALYSIS AND CARING FOR OUR WORLD IN THE 21ST CENTURY Katharine L. Bainbridge, M.A. Wednesday, December 5 7:30-9:30pm Environmental distress, overpopulation, economic instability, and the vanishing of the sacred all contribute to a sense of psychological imbalance within the individual. From a psychological perspective, the inner and outer worlds can no longer be separated if we are to survive as a species. From a Buddhist point of view this separation never existed. This talk will explore the vital necessity of "going out" into the world and caring for others and the environment as we continue to turn and look within through the self-reflection provided by analysis, as well as individual meditation and contemplation. Pre-registered: $25 / At Door: $30 2 hours APA, CE, CN available 6 o integrate one’s THE KIEFFER E. FRANTZ CLINIC AND THE HILDE KIRSCH CHILDREN’S CENTER Established as the first clinic in the world offering Jungian analysis on a sliding-fee scale, and 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 The Hilde Kirsch Children's Center (HKCC) is the first and only Jungian Children's Center in the United States. Since its inception in December 1978, 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. THE C.G. JUNG BOOKSTORE AND THE MAX AND LORE ZELLER LIBRARY The C.G. Jung Bookstore carries a small 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. Exclusive offerings include audio CDs of such leading Jungian analysts as Marie-Louise von Franz and Edward F. Edinger and the thirty DVDs in the Remembering Jung series. Orders may be placed by telephone, e-mail, letter, or online at www.junginla.org/bookstore_online The Max and Lore Zeller Library, the only one of its kind in the city, serves the Jungian professional community and the general public as well. It is a 7,000-volume collection of books, plus journals, DVDs, and CDs. 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. www.junginla.org/words&images/zeller_library The annual Library Book Sale will be on Saturday, September 29, 9:00am-2:00pm 7 THE ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY CLUB PLACES OF THE SOUL: SEEING AND CREATING DEPTH AND MEANING IN HOMES, WORKPLACES AND PUBLIC PLACES Anthony Lawlor Saturday, September 8 10:00am-2:00pm This workshop is designed to help participants deepen the experience of soulfulness in their home, workplace, and community. Through experiential exercises, slide presentations, and discussion, there will be ample opportunity to explore personal ways of perceiving soulfulness as well as arranging furnishings, selecting colors, choosing materials, and using light to animate and enrich dwelling spaces. The workshop is structured to give you the tools to experience and create living, breathing places for the soul. Please bring your lunch. Pre-registered: $50 / At Door: $55 HILDEGARD OF BINGEN: VISIONARY AND MUSE Nancy Fierro, D.M.A. Saturday, September 15 9:30am-12:30pm Nine hundred years after her birth, Hildegard has re-emerged as a dynamic heroine. Her dazzling creativity extended into the worlds of cosmology, natural science, theology, art, music and medicine, and her advice was sought by kings, emperors and popes. In this lecture we will examine the visionary spirit and insights of this wise woman, who achieved her best work after midlife and whose breakthrough offers both inspiration and practical help to all who struggle to bring their inner truth into creative expression. Pre-registered: $40 / At Door: $45 A WEEK-END WITH EREL SHALIT Erel Shalit, Ph.D. Series: Pre-registered: $75 Friday Lecture: Pre-registered: $25 / At Door: $30 Saturday Workshop: Pre-registered: $60 / At Door: $65 THE CYCLE OF LIFE: THEMES AND TALES OF THE JOURNEY Friday, October 5 7:30-9:30pm “To speak of a general, human life cycle,” says Daniel Levinson, “is to propose that the journey from birth to old age follows an underlying, universal pattern on which there are endless cultural and individual variations.” In his essay “The Stages of Life” Jung discusses “the problems connected with the stages of life,” claiming problem to be the kernel of culture and consciousness. On our journey through the stages of our life, we encounter the archetypal essence of each phase and are challenged by the essence of meaning that we are requested to deal with on our journey. The lecture will explore crucial archetypal images of the journey and the stages of life, and tell some of the stories. DREAMS AND THE CYCLE OF LIFE: AN EXPERIENTIAL WORKSHOP Saturday, October 6 10:00am-3:00pm Following a brief introduction on dreams and their relation to the cycle of life, the dream will be related to as a “gift from Hermes.” Participators’ dreams will become the possession of the group, of the temporary community. There will be no therapeutic work on the dream; rather, the role of the dreamer is as the messenger, who brings the dream so that the community may explore its images and significance. Please bring your lunch. 8 s in their home, EXPLORING THE IMAGES FROM C.G. JUNG'S RED BOOK Bishop Stephan A. Hoeller Saturday, October 13 3:00-6:00pm Jung painted the many images contained in The Red Book not as an artist, but as an esoteric iconographer. Most of those pictures will be projected and discussed by Dr. Hoeller on the basis of his deep interest in, and knowledge of, the Liber Novus (The Red Book). Pre-registered: $45 / At Door: $50 SELF AND THE PARADOX OF FREE WILL: A DIALOGUE ON SCIENCE AND CONSCIENCE Uri M. Maoz, Ph.D. Saturday, November 3 10:00am-1:00pm Christophe Le Mouël, Ph.D. Much of our social order is based on the notion that adult humans can, and do, act freely and are therefore morally responsible for their actions and potentially culpable. Jung recognized that freedom is necessary to moral responsibility, yet at the end of his life he also criticized some of his students for indulging in a naive belief in free will. Neuroscientist Uri Maoz will briefly review some relevant points in the history of thought dedicated to the concept of free will and will also focus on contributions to the debate around decision-making and voluntary control of action. If time permits, he will then address the implications of this research for moral responsibility. Physicist Christophe Le Mouël will respond to those scientific advances and present Jung’s psychological view on the paradox of free will in the light of his conception of the Self. Pre-registered: $45 / At Door: $50 TENDING THE FIRE TOGETHER: ACTIVE IMAGINATION IN A GROUP SETTING Maggie Gwinn, M.F.T. Sundays, November 4 and 11 10:00am-1:00pm In this two-session workshop, we will approach active imagination as a solitary activity, contained in a group setting. If you’ve wanted to try active imagination, but feel in need of support and guidance, please join us! In addition to lecture material, we will discuss readings from Jung and others, then have the opportunity to experience the "doing" of active imagination with exercises and non-directive feedback. This workshop is especially recommended for analytic patients, writers, anyone interested in exploring shadow material and members of Twelve-Step Programs. A reading list will be provided upon registration. Series: Pre-registered: $65 Individual Classes: Pre-registered: $40 / At Door: 45 Continuing Education Credits are not available for programs presented by the Analytical Psychology Club. will become the 9 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. Katharine Bainbridge, M.A., is a Jungian analyst with a private psychotherapy practice in Encino. She is a long-time Buddhist and practitioner of Dzogchen. She has lectured frequently at the Jung Institute on aspects of the feminine principle. In 2010, she traveled to sacred sites of the feminine in Tibet and Nepal. Robert Bosnak, founding executive director of the Santa Barbara Healing Sanctuary, and founder of The Asclepian Foundation of Western Medicine, is a graduate of the C.G. Jung Institute in Zurich (1977) where he trained primarily with Aniela Jaffe and James Hillman. He is the author of a variety of books, including A Little Course in Dreams, translated into a dozen languages. His most recent books are Embodiment: Creative Imagination in Medicine, Art and Travel, and he is the editor of Imagination and Medicine. 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 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. John Dobbs, Ph.D., is a licensed psychologist and certified Jungian Analyst with offices in Santa Monica and San Luis Obispo. He is a senior analyst and faculty member of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles, and is also the Chair of the Institute’s Doctoral Committee. Susan Frankel, J.D., Ph.D., is an advanced candidate at the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles and a licensed psychologist in private practice in Century City, California. She practiced law for seven years before returning to graduate school in psychology. She presented a shorter version of her experience with infant observation at the Council of North American Societies of Jungian Analysts Conference in New Orleans in November, 2011. Harriet Friedman, M.A., M.F.T., 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. Shirley A. Gooch, R.N., Ph.D., is a Training and Supervising analyst in Adult and Child Analysis at the Psychoanalytic Center of California. She is past Dean of the P.C.C., past Chair of the Infant, Child and Adolescent Committee, and is a Senior Infant Observation instructor. For many years she supervised and taught at the Reiss-Davis Child Study Center, the Wright Institute, and the Maple Counseling Center. Currently she works with adults, adolescents, and children in private practice in Beverly Hills, CA. 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 on dreams at UCLA School of Medicine, Reiss-Davis Child Study Center and the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles. Annie Reiner, Ph.D., Psy.D., L.C.S.W., is a member and senior faculty member of The Psychoanalytic Center of California (PCC) in Los Angeles and a fellow of the International Psychoanalytic Association (IPA). Her work was influenced by the ideas of Wilfred Bion, with whom she studied briefly in the 1970s. Her psychoanalytic writings have been published in many journals and anthologies, and her books Bion and Being: Passion and the Creative Mind (2012) and The Quest for Conscience and the Birth of the Mind (2009), were published by Karnac. In addition to her psychoanalytic work, Dr Reiner is a poet, playwright, and author/illustrator of children’s books. She maintains a private practice in Beverly Hills, California. Rose-Emily Rothenberg, M.A., M.F.T., is a Jungian analyst in private practice in Pacific Palisades. A member of the faculty of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles, she has lectured nationally and internationally on the topics of psyche/body and the orphan archetype. She is the author of The Jewel in the Wound: How the Body Expresses the Needs of the Psyche and Offers a Path to Transformation. Valerie Rubinstein von Raffay, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist in private practice in Beverly Hills who also consults with the chronically mentally ill. A faculty member and analyst at LAISPS and supervisor at the Wright Institute, she has presented on masochism, the fascistic personality, and primitive mental states. 10 Andrew Samuels, Ph.D., is a Jungian analyst in private practice in London. A co-founder of the UK's Psychotherapists and Counsellors for Social Responsibility, he has authored several papers and books, including Politics on the Couch: Citizenship and the Internal Life (which was awarded the Gradiiva Prize 2001 by the National Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis), The Father, and Jung and the Post-Jungians. Andrew Samuels' books have been translated into 19 languages. Sachiko Taki Reece, Ed.D., J.A., is a Jungian analyst and a faculty 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. Wendy Wyman-McGinty, Ph.D., ADTR, is a Jungian analyst, clinical psychologist, and dance therapist in private practice in West Los Angeles, with an interest in the somatic aspect of analysis, and its relationship to the development of a symbolic process. Her work has appeared in Spring Journal, The Journal of Analytical Psychology, Authentic Movement, Vol. II, and Supervision in Dance/Movement Psychotherapy. Jacob Zighelboim, M.D., is a retired physician/scientist and a former professor of Medicine and Microbiology and Immunology at the Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. In addition to publishing over eighty peer-reviewed articles, he is co-author of ten books, focusing primarily on the immunology of cancer. Most recently he has written From Fear to Awe and To Health!: The New Humanistic Oncology. He is currently Professor of Philosophical Thought and Chair of the Board of Directors at the Academy for Jewish Religion. APC PRESENTER BIOGRAPHIES les and a licensed Nancy Fierro, D.M.A. , has traveled extensively both nationally and internationally as a pianist and lecturer. A specialist in the life and work of 12th century mystic, musician, scientist, and prophet Hildegard of Bingen, she has published a monograph and two lecture audio recordings about the abbess. She was a keynote speaker for the International Hildegard Network Conference in Salisbury, England, and was also invited by the mayor of Bingen, Germany, to present her lecture as part of the festivities celebrating the 900th anniversary of Hildegard’s birth. Maggie Gwinn, M.F.T., is a Jungian analyst in private practice in Brentwood. She is an AAMFT Approved Supervisor, on the supervising faculty of Antioch University. Maggie is a member of the writing consortium Gunfighter Nation and a 2009 nominee for the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize for her play, Torture. Maggie has previously lectured at the Jung Institute on Jung and Twelve-Step Programs and on the Parentified Child. and author of In addition to her y on the topics of Dr. Stephan A. Hoeller is a bishop of the Gnostic Church and has lectured on Jung and his wisdom in many countries. Soon after the publication of The Red Book, he prepared a series of 13 lectures on this work which are available from B.C. Recordings (bcrecordings.net). He is the author of The Gnostic Jung, The Seven Sermons to the Dead and Jung and the Lost Gospels. Anthony Lawlor is an architect and author whose work focuses on the relationship between architecture and psyche. His books A Home for the Soul and The Temple in the House describe how buildings and cities serve as allies in deepening conscious experience in daily life. He is currently designing a healing center in Corfu based on the aesclepia (healing centers) of ancient Greece. Christophe Le Mouël, Ph.D., holds a doctorate in particle physics. His series of lectures Four: A Reflection on the Wholeness of Nature, given at the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles, has been published in Psychological Perspectives. He is the Executive Director of the C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles. Uri M. Maoz, Ph.D., holds a doctorate in neuroscience from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He is currently a post-doctoral Fellow at Caltech's Division of Biology, under the supervision of Christof Koch. His research focuses on free will. He has lectured internationally on neuroscience and society. Dr. Erel Shalit is a Jungian psychoanalyst practicing in Ra’anana, Israel. He is Founding Director of the Jungian Psychotherapy Program at Bar Ilan University. A training and supervising analyst, and past President of the Israel Society of Analytical Psychology, Dr. Shalit also served as Director of the Shamai Davidson Community Mental Health Clinic at the Shalvata Psychiatric Center in Israel. His most recent books include The Cycle of Life: Themes and Tales of the Journey; Requiem: A Tale of Exile and Return; and Enemy, Cripple & Beggar: Shadows in the Hero’s Path. In addition Dr Shalit's work has appeared in numerous books and journals. He wrote the chapter on Jerusalem in Tom Singer (ed.), Psyche and the City. He is on the editorial board of Quadrant. With Nancy Furlotti, he is editing a forthcoming volume on The Dream and its Amplification. 11 Public Programs Fall 2012 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 x221 Permit No. 31777 Los Angeles, CA PAID U.S. POSTAGE NON-PROFIT ORG.