Here are the talks and workshops that happened at the Monterey Friends of CG Jung.
“Among the most necessary and important tasks of depth psychology is its concern for the creative health of the individual, and for the psychologist of culture, who recognizes that the peril of present-day mankind springs in large part from the one-sided patriarchal development of the male intellectual consciousness no longer kept in balance by the matriarchal world of the psyche, is…. an integration and synthesis necessary to develop the psychic wholeness that is urgently needed if [humanity] is to face the dangers that threaten [its] existence from within and without.”—Erich Neumann
We have begun a new book! From the back cover of the book, “…Jung and Pauli discussed the nature of dreams and their relation to reality, finding surprising common ground between depth psychology and quantum physics and profoundly influencing each other’s work. This portrait of an incredible friendship will fascinate readers interested in psychology, science, creativity and genius.” It’s never too late to join this group.
2001 was released fifty years ago. “It is the most important film ever made. That’s how I felt when I saw it in Chicago, first-run, in the fall of 1968; after countless viewings through a five-decade timespan, my feelings have not wavered,” says John. Jeff will interview John about his opinions and researches, and we will have a general discussion of Stanley Kubrick’s masterpiece, its mythos, and archetypal implications. John will describe how the film is quintessential in his theory of cinemaesthesia.
In Part I we examined some deep roots of Gnosticism in the Great Goddess Cultures, in the prophecies of Zarathustra, and in the gnostic revival throughout the Mediterranean world in 100 BCE—300 CE whose riches were only recently revealed to us in the discovery of the Nag Hammadi Library in 1945 which had been buried in the desert in Egypt for 1600 years. “We find in Gnosticism … a belief in the efficacy of individual revelation and individual knowledge. This belief was rooted in the proud feeling of man's affinity with the gods,” writes Jung who found the first parallels of his Red Book visions in gnostic literature. Tonight we’ll explore the second wave of gnostic revival which flourished for 400 years in the unique culture of the Occitane at the turn of the first millennium. These beautiful mountains, rivers and valleys birthed a unique culture influenced by the great Sufi love mystics from Andalusia, a reflowering of the sacred feminine in the vernacular language of the Troubadours, in the Love Courts of Eleanor of Aquitaine, in the Grail Legends, the Black Madonna’s Gothic “temples,” in Cathar female spiritual leaders, and ruling Queens who replaced Crusading husbands. Tarot and Templar Knights, free guilds and democratic town associations all thrived in this lush landscape of the Langue d’Oc. In 2016 I joined a group of gnostic Templars on a Black Madonna tour of the region and then struck out on my own pilgrimage to explore the “Cathar Castles,” the last defences of the enlightened culture annihilated by the Catholic Church in the Albigensian Crusade, the first official genocide. Slideshow presentation.
Let’s gather and celebrate as the year comes to its metaphorical ending, allowing space to consider transformation and new beginnings. Time for recollection, offerings of poetry, readings, or whatever you fancy. Please bring drinks and food to share. As always, costumes welcome.
John and Jeff will report on the 16th conference of the Jungian Society for Scholarly Studies, held June 27–30 in Portland, Oregon—with the theme of “emerging” and “emergence.”
Time for debate. Is a society that does not know the essence of its own myths and their functions doomed to re-living its history? Are there such things as harmful myths? This evening, we will discuss the mythology associated with the American Frontier and its connection with nowadays gun violence.