Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Jungian Psychotherapy Program at Bar Ilan University


We are pleased to announce the opening of a three-year program in

Jungian Psychotherapy

Bar Ilan University, Continuing Education, Weisfeld School of Social Work

Dr. Erel Shalit, Academic Director

For further details, please click here

Studies are conducted in Hebrew, please see below

תוכנית תלת-שנתית לפסיכותרפיה בגישה האנליטית של יונג

מרכז אקדמי: ד"ר אראל שליט

אוכלוסיית היעד
עובדים סוציאליים בעלי תואר שני לפחות, פסיכולוגים, פסיכיאטרים. מספר מקומות ישמרו למועמדים בעלי תואר שני בתחומי הטיפול, כגון טיפול ביצירה

והבעה וקרימינולוגיה קלינית.


מטרת התכנית

התוכנית מיועדת להכשיר אנשי מקצוע למטפלים בפסיכותרפיה ע"פ הגישה האנליטית של יונג. התוכנית תקנה היכרות מעמיקה עם תורתו של יונג ודרך יישומה: כולל הבנת נפש האדם המתפתחת בתהליך האינדיבידואציה שלו ובתוך סביבתו ושורשיו התרבותיים, החל מהילדות המוקדמת, הבגרות, אמצע החיים והזקנה. תלמד גם הגישה הסימבולית והטיפולית של הפסיכולוגיה היונגיאנית ואופן העבודה עם תכני הלא-מודע. ההוראה וההדרכה ינתנו ע"י מיטב האנליטיקאיים היונגיאניים בארץ.


סגל ההוראה

ד"ר אברמוביץ יהודה, פסיכיאטר, מנהל מחלקה בבאר יעקב, אנליטיקאי יונגיאני בכיר ד"ר באומן אבי, פסיכולוג קליני ואנליטיקאי יונגיאני בכיר גב' פורת רינה, פסיכולוגית חינוכית וקלינית, אנליטיקאית יונגיאנית בכירה ד"ר שליט אראל, פסיכולוג קליני ואנליטיקאי יונגיאני בכיר רשימת המרצים והמדריכים המלאה תופיע בפירוט התוכנית באתר היחידה ללימודי המשך

מטלות קריאת רצופה של חומר מקצועי בעברית ובאנגלית. הגשת עבודה בהיקף של 5-7 עמודים בסיום השנה הראשונה והשנייה אשר תשקף את הבנת הרוח היונגיאנית בסיום שנה שלישית תוגש עבודה אשר בה יידרש שילוב של הבנת התיאוריה והגישה הטיפולית. על הסטודנט להתחיל הדרכה פרטנית בשנה הראשונה, ולהמשיכה עד לסיום התוכנית. ההדרכה תינתן ע"י מדריכי התוכנית בעלות של 250 ₪ לשעת הדרכה. נדרשות 90 שעות הדרכה, אשר מתחלקת בין שני מדריכים, לפחות 30 שעות אצל כל מדריך. לסטודנטים בתוכנית מומלץ לעבור טיפול באוריינטציה יונגיאנית.


תעודה

לעומדים בהצלחה בדרישות התכנית תוענק תעודה המאשרת סיום לימודי פסיכותרפיה בגישת הפסיכולוגיה האנליטית של יונג, מטעם היחידה ללימודי המשך של ביה"ס לעבודה סוציאלית, ע"ש לואיס וגבי וייספלד, אוניברסיטת בר-אילן.


מבנה התכנית

הלימודים יתקיימו במשך שלוש שנים במתכונת משולבת של קורסים תיאורטיים, סדנאות חווייתיות, סמינר קליני והדרכה קבוצתית, בימי שני, בין השעות 15:00-20:30 בשנה הראשונה, ובין השעות 20:30-13:00 בשנה השנייה ושלישית. סה"כ 572 שעות.


ההרשמה

על הנרשמים לצרף: טופס הרשמה - רצ"ב דמי הרשמה – המחאה בסך 250 ₪ לפקודת אוניברסיטת בר-אילן. קורות חיים תמונה פספורט צילומי תעודות של התואר הראשון/השני המועמדים המתאימים יוזמנו לראיונות אישיים. המתקבלים לתכנית מחויבים לתכנית המלאה. שכר הלימוד שנה א' - 8,447 ₪ + 250 ₪ דמי הרשמה. ניתן לשלם בשמונה תשלומים הצמודים למדד יוקר המחיה יולי 2011. שנה ב' – 8,447 ₪ ניתן לשלם בשמונה תשלומים הצמודים למדד יוקר המחיה יולי 2012. שנה ג' – 8,447 ₪ ניתן לשלם בשמונה תשלומים הצמודים למדד יוקר המחיה יולי 2013.


:פרטים נוספים

לימודי המשך ביה"ס לעבודה סוציאלית ע"ש לואיס וגבי וייספלד אוניברסיטת בר- אילן

טלפונים: 5317265 - 03, 5318211 - 03

פקס: 7384043 - 03


Saturday, April 2, 2011

All the World’s a Stage, and a Stage of Life

Fisher King Press to publish 
by Erel Shalit

“The art of life is the most distinguished and rarest of all the arts.”  
 - C.G. Jung, CW 8, par. 789.

In the first half of life, the task of the young traveler is to depart from home, to step out into the world in search for his or her adventure, to find his or her own individual path. However, in the second half, we find ourselves on what often amounts to a very long journey in search of Home. In many a tale, the hero, for instance Gilgamesh, sets off on his road to find life’s elixir, while other stories, such as the Odyssey, revolve around the hero’s long and arduous journey home.

This archetypal journey of life is constantly repeated along the never-ending process of individuation. We find ourselves returning to this venture repeatedly, every night, as we set out on our nightly voyage into the landscape of our unconscious. Many dreams begin by being on the way, for instance, “I am on my way to …,” I am driving on a road that leads into the desert …,” I am walking through one room after the other in a long corridor-like building …,” “I am walking towards my office, but it looks different than in reality,” “I walk on the pavement and on the opposite side of the street someone seems to follow me …,” “I go down into an underground parking…,” “I am in my car, but someone I don’t know is driving,” or, “I have to go to the place from where I came ...”

Prominently, we are familiar with the journey of Dante, who at the very beginning of his Divine Comedy finds himself “Midway along the journey of our life.”


A partial list of topics explored in The Cycle of Life include:

I. The Journey
   Stages and Seasons
   Jung’s Stages of Life
   All the World’s a Stage, and a Stage of Life
   Being on the Way—A Way of Being
   Hermes and the Journey: Being on the Way
   Backward and Forward
   The Crossroads
   + more
II. The Child
   The Child in the Mirror
   Psychotherapy and Childhood
   The Divine Child
   From Divine to Human
   Eros, Psyche and Pleasure
   + more
III. The Puer and the Puella
   Between Shame and Fear
   Wine, Spirit and Fire
   Prometheus—the Thoughtful Thief
   + more
IV. The Adult
   King on Earth
   Boundaries of Reality
   Celestial Jerusalem—Terrestrial Jerusalem
   The King who Refuses to Die
   The Dried-up Earth
   The Limping Ego
   The Empty Shell
   + more
V. i. The Senex
V. ii. Homage to Sophocles
V. iii. The Last Chapter: Self and Meaning
   Ancestral Roots
   An Oak and an Acorn
   We Are All Beggars, Are We Not?
  + more
    Fisher King Press publishes an eclectic mix of worthy books including Jungian Psychological Perspectives, Cutting Edge Fiction, and a growing list of alternative titles.
      • We Ship Worldwide.
      • Credit Cards Accepted.
      • Phone Orders Welcomed. Toll free in the US & Canada: 1-800-228-9316 International +1-831-238-7799 skype: fisher_king_press

      Tuesday, March 8, 2011

      New York Jung Foundation: A History of the Dream


      The 2011 President's Lecture Series


      A History of the Dream: Fate and Destiny from Gilgamesh to Jung

      Erel Shalit, PhD

      Tuesday, March 22, 2011, 7:00 - 8:30 pm

      Tickets: Jung Foundation members $20, General Public $25

      Full information at:
      http://www.cgjungny.org/lectures_04.html
      The dream is a muthos, a mouth that gives expression to the voice of fate and destiny. A story of the dream is told from the ancient dreams of Gilgamesh and Nebuchadnezzar to the Greek discourse; from Freud and Dora on to Jung's final dream.

      By tracing the dream and the image, we follow man's grand opus of turning pre-destined fate into prospective destiny, until hubris may again endanger the future.


      Dr. Erel Shalit is a Jungian psychoanalyst in Ra'anana, Israel. He is a training and supervising analyst, and past President of the Israel Society of Analytical Psychology. He has served as liaison person of the International Association of Analytical Psychology (IAAP) with the Jung Society of Bulgaria. He is a past Director of the Shamai Davidson Community Mental Health Clinic, at the Shalvata Psychiatric Centre in Israel. Erel Shalit has served as officer in the IDF Medical Corps, and is a member of The Council for Peace and Security. He is Academic Director of the 'Jung's Analytical Psychology' program at Bar Ilan University. He is the author of Requiem: A Tale of Exile and Return (2010), Enemy, Cripple & Beggar: Shadows in the Hero's Path (2008; the book was a nominee for the 2009 Gradiva Award for Best Theoretical Book, National Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis), The Hero and His Shadow: Psychopolitical Aspects of Myth and Reality in Israel (2004), The Complex: Path of Transformation from Archetype to Ego (2002), and The Life Cycle: Themes and Tales of the Journey (June 21, 2011). Dr. Shalit lectures at professional institutes, universities, and cultural forums in Israel, Europe and the United States.


      Requiem: A Tale of Exile and Return is on sale now for $14.95, and Enemy, Cripple, Beggar is on sale now for $19.95 or $30.00 for the pair when ordered directly from the Fisher King Press. You can also order The Hero and His Shadow: Psychopolitcal Aspects of Myth and Reality in Israel directly from Fisher King Press. Phone orders welcomed, Credit Cards accepted. 1-800-228-9316 toll free in the US & Canada, International +1-831-238-7799

      Download the

      Fisher King Press Catalog of Publications

      Fisher King Press Price List and Order Form

      Saturday, February 5, 2011

      REQUIEM ON THE NILE

      The fire and the flames of revolt sweep across the Arab Crescent. Does the unrest herald the requiem of the Arab Kings? Perhaps these are the torches of democracy that are lit by the oppressed, the banners of freedom that defy non-elected rulers and dictators. Perhaps this proclaims the dawn of a new era, echoing the prospects and possibilities of change in the Middle East.

      Or do darker forces linger in the shadow of hope and freedom, hiding behind the veils, holding their horses behind the courageous, ready to ride forth on the waves of uprising, when the time is ripe?

      In Tunisia, Zine Ben Ali was ousted, but it seems the old guard and the army generals still hold on to power. The January Jasmine revolution simply led to a coup from within, likely generating reforms, but not necessarily a change of power or structure of the authoritarian regime. In Lebanon, the Hezbollah staged a coup, the Syrians threatened the Druze leader, and the Prime Minster was quickly ousted, replaced by a puppet in the hands of Iranian-directed Hezbollah, who now holds political and military power in the country.

      In Egypt we witness the clash of major opposing forces:

      From a Western perspective, democratic forces have risen against the dictatorial regime. Toward the end of his 30-year autocratic rule, Mubarak offers reforms, and cynically one may wonder, why did he not implement those suggested reforms during the decades he had the exclusive power to do so.

      But no less perplexing, where were the voices of protest against Mubarak’s regime and its oppression of human and civil rights until now? Is it perhaps indicative that Egypt for decades was a member of the UN Human Rights Commission and its successor the Human Rights Council? Never did any of these bodies investigate or report on human rights violations in Egypt, while half of the Council’s critical decisions and resolutions on specific states’ human right’s records have been about Israel.

      While Mubarak retained a cold peace with Israel, he not only refrained from visiting (except for the funeral of Itzhak Rabin), but did nothing to prevent hatred, or promote education toward peace – unfortunately similar to the Palestinian Authority.

      From an Iranian perspective, this is the beginning of an Islamic renaissance in the Middle East, a movement toward removing the West’s autocratic puppet regimes.

      And for a brief moment, Mohamed ElBaradei has returned to Egypt to play the temporary façade and front, the marionette of the different forces that believe that his Janus-face serve their interests, prominently so the Muslim Brotherhood, themselves speaking in different tongues. Only innocent desire, naïve hope and the blindness of denial award him a Nobel Peace Prize, until his persona of deceit, particularly as regards Iran's true intentions, was torn off by his successor at the International Atomic Energy Agency.

      Egypt seems to reflect the forces that are played out across the Middle East: the people against the autocrats; army vs. Islamic fundamentalism. Also the Islamic revolution in Iran was initially an uprising against the oppressive regime of the Shah, until it became a revival of Islam. However, in spite of the similarity, there is a difference between Shia Iran and Sunni Egypt.

      Democracy is more than elections. Yasser Arafat was elected, but never felt a need to stand for re-election. And following the West’s insisting on Palestinian elections, the result has been two governments and a military coup. Free elections are a manifestation, a symptom of democracy. Democracy is a state of mind, which evolves through the establishment of democratic institutions, parties, free press, and education. The transition to democracy can be sudden, since freedom is an archetypal need, just like the development of consciousness. But it requires a balance of forces. Democracy requires more than “one person, one vote, one time,” which may be the result of elections when non-democratic forces exploit a situation of confusion, depression and despair, as has happened in history, such as but not only Germany in the 1930s.

      How will the present changes affect Israel? Geo-politically, it will likely not be easier. The cold yet strategically vital peace with Egypt, and the formal agreement between the countries may be in danger. Israel is likely to become even more alienated in the area, possibly emphasizing its identity as a Mediterranean country rather than a nation in the Middle East. The right in Israel will conclude that there really is no one to make peace with, and sigh in relief. The left, on the other hand, will claim the necessity and urge to move ahead toward agreements with the Palestinians.

      Can similar uprisings to the ones in Tunisia and Egypt (and prior to that, the 2009 election protests in Iran, unfortunately much more weakly supported by the West), take place in Israel? (This is, in fact, is part of the story line Requiem: A Tale of Exile and Return.? Yes and no.

      No, because Israel is a democracy, with freedom of expression, protest and free elections.

      Yes, because democracy in Israel is a vulnerable balance between powerful forces. There is increasing reluctance of the majority to carry the extra-ordinary military and financial burdens of political stalemate and orthodox religious draining of state resources , enabled by a weak government paying for power (by giving in to corrupt coalition demands, rather than preserving integrity - leading to attempts to burden the majority with even heavier taxes).

      Primarily, the Arab minority in Israel proper is torn between the benefits, in spite of longtime negligence, of living in Israel, and their identity as Palestinians. If major efforts are not made to bring greater equality and integration of the Arab minority, unrest seems inevitable.

      And if Israel does not withdraw and define its borders in such a way that the Palestinians can establish a viable state based primarily in the West Bank, the country will find itself in a condition of permanent unrest and conflict between Jews and Arabs, lose its democratic basis and deteriorate internally and internationally.

      The present government may turn its weakness into an asset, by considerably revising its policies, opening up toward sincere negotiations. The leaks from the previous government's negotiations with the Palestinian leadership simultaneously demonstrate the possibility of progress, and the difficulty finalizing an agreement. But stalemate will bring an end to the present government, since clearly these are times of change.

      Requiem: A Tale of Exile and Return
      is on sale now for $12.95, and Enemy, Cripple, Beggar is on sale now for $19.95 or $30.00 for the pair when ordered directly from the Fisher King Press. You can also order The Hero and His Shadow: Psychopolitcal Aspects of Myth and Reality in Israel directly from Fisher King Press. Phone orders welcomed, Credit Cards accepted. 1-800-228-9316 toll free in the US & Canada, International +1-831-238-7799

      Friday, January 7, 2011

      Will Fishes Fly in Aquarius - Or Will They Drown in the Bucket?




      As many of us are aware, Mel Mathews and Fisher King Press (including il piccolo editions and Genoa House) have moved into the forefront of publishing Jungian works, as well as literature and poetry.
      Many of Fisher King Press titles can now also be purchased as eBooks, available at Amazon (US, UK - Kindle), Barnes & Noble (Nook), Apple Bookstore, Lulu (for Sony Readers, Mac OS and Windows PC), and at Google Bookstore.

      New eBook published January 5, 2011:

      Will Fishes Fly in Aquarius
      Or Will They Drown in the Bucket?

      "Jung’s book Aion serves as point of departure for this publication. The transition of the aeons from Pisces to Aquarius reflects decisive changes in the relationship between man and image – the image which is at the center of what Jung calls psychization, the process of reflection whereby consciousness is enhanced. At the daybreak of history, man extracted the image from the divine waters. Then, the craftsman whom God warned should not make graven images, came to replicate the divine on earth. By means of image and reflection, dream and dreaming, man becomes human, in the sense of not only partaking in events, but able to relate to experience. In Aquarius, images have been rounded up, and man now holds the bucket. “God’s powers have passed into our hands,” says Jung, which forces man to consider the shadow of unreflective progress, such as the transient as-if personality and soullessness. The legend of the golem serves to illustrate the condition of man, who has become master of the images that may either create or destroy our future."

      An earlier version has been published in the San Francisco Jung Institute Library Journal.

      Cover painting, The Fifth Day, from the 'Genesis series' by Mira Raman


      Visit Erel Shalit's Amazon Author page

      For further information about Fisher King Press e-book titles, please click here

      For information on Erel Shalit e-book titles, please click here

      Thursday, December 23, 2010

      The Red Book Binder and the Craftsman’s Ego





      I see the craftsman as a central image of the archetypally rooted adult ego. The hero, who serves as a bridge between the archetypal and the individual realms, has frequently both a divine and a personal father. The latter is often a craftsman. For the hero to set out on his journey into the depths and the vast lands of the unconscious, he or she needs to be ignited by the very sparks of the beyond, as they manifest in ego-consciousness.

      Jung writes,
      The hero’s father is often a master carpenter or some kind of artisan. According to an Arabian legend, Terah, the father of Abraham, was a master craftsman who could cut a shaft from any bit of wood, which means in Arabic usage that he was a begetter of excellent sons. … Joseph, the father of Jesus, was a carpenter, and so was Cinyras, the father of Adonis, who was supposed to have invented the hammer, the lever, roof-building and mining. …In fairytales, the hero’s father is, more modestly, the traditional woodcutter.
      [1]

      The original Red Book of Jung's is a masterpiece not only of his, but of bookbinder craftsmanship as well. Sonu Shamdasani writes, “After completing the handwritten Draft, Jung had it typed, and edited. …The first section of the work …was composed on parchment. Jung then commissioned a large folio volume of over 600 pages, bound in red leather, from the bookbinders, Emil Stierli.”[2]

      While Jung’s active imaginations, the fantasy material that forms the basis of his interpretations and elaborations, preceded their inscription in the Red Book, the ego’s sublime craftsmanship may be required for the heroic descent into the darkness of the unknown. The impressively bound pages of the red leather-covered tome hold and contain the inscription of Jung’s remarkable descent into the archetypal depths of the unconscious. The masterfully bound book is like the crafted ego that enables the hero’s journey. “It is the creation of the alchemical vessel that invites the soul into dialogue and union to bring forth the divine. This carefully crafted and beautiful Red Book honored the process and contents as a container for Jung's transformation.”[3]


      The craftsman replicates the divine on earth by means of his skill, patience, carefulness and hard work. The first craftsman in the Bible was Bezalel. He built the Tabernacle, the tent set up by Moses, in which the Ark of the Covenant – a chest of acacia wood holding the stone tablets of the Ten Commandments – was carried through the wilderness. Thereby he replicated creation. Bezalel “knew the combinations of letters with which heaven and earth were made,” [that is, the letters of God’s name], and thus was able to build the Tabernacle, which was considered “a complete microcosm, a miraculous copy of everything that is in heaven and on earth.”[4]He thus created an imago mundi, a crafted replica of the universe, wherein, like in a temple, the divine can dwell on earth.

      With wishes for a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year, a soulful year during which concern for the world we live in will be at the top of the agenda of those that lead our world into the coming decade.



      The above is excerpted from a forthcoming Fisher King Press publication by Erel Shalit on Archetypal Images of the Life Cycle.

      [1]CW 5, par. 515.
      [2]‘Introduction,’ The Red Book, p. 203.
      [3]Nancy Furlotti, personal communication.
      [4]Gershom Scholem, On the Kabbalah and its Symbolism, p. 166f.



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      Friday, December 3, 2010

      Fire at Chanukah


      Chanukah is the festival of lights, marking the rededication of the (second) Temple. The oil, enough for one day only, that fuelled the eternal flame in the Temple lasted miraculously for eight days.
      This Chanukah, however, will be remembered for the biggest fire in our history, which rages at Mount Carmel, threatening the city of Haifa. Much of the most beautiful forest area has been destroyed. Prisons and hospitals, towns and villages, have been evacuated, some severely damaged. There have been more than forty fatalities, most trapped in a bus trying to escape the fire. Up to two million trees may have been destroyed.

      There has been a tremendous world-wide response to Israel's need for assistance. There are not enough fire-fighters, not enough fire retardants. Bulgaria, Greece, Cyprus, Russia, Turkey, Spain, Britain, Egypt, Jordan, France, Croatia, Spain, Romania and other countries have sent fire fighters and fire-fighting planes.
      The international aid as well as the thousands of volunteers that help curb the fire, help and host the evacuated, and assist in the emergency is heart-warming.

      The cause of the fire has not been determined yet, though arson and carelessness are common causes. The tree of life and renewal - almost every tree in Israel has been planted - can all too easily be destroyed. Fire is one of nature's prominent energies of transformation. However, when merely razing outside the realms of the ego, it may be destructive rather than constructive. In the hands of the Promethean capability of consciousness and ‘thinking ahead,’ fire may serve acculturation, light, warmth and relatedness, conscious will, focus and intention. (This will be elaborated in my forthcoming book 'Archetypal images of the life cycle,' to be published by Fisher King Press in 2011).

      Disturbingly, the Interior Minister, from one of the Orthodox religious parties, has asked for a Committee of Inquiry to be established, which is obviously his way of avoiding responsibility for great neglect, for which he should resign (or, truly, be fired). It is due to his, and others' neglect that what should have remained a small fired that was quickly curbed by appropriately equipped firemen, became an ecological catastrophe.
      In my Enemy, Cripple Beggar I devote a chapter to the prophet Elijah. His confrontation with King Ahab on Mount Carmel ranks as "the most dramatic moment in the centuries of struggle between Hebrew monotheism and the seductive pagan cults that constantly eroded it" (Comay). Many now pray for the fire to be extinguished, just like many have prayed for the rain that so far has failed to fall. However, prayer is not enough. When the soul and the meaning of history and legend are lost to short-sighted political benefits for socially parasitical groups that avoid participating in the welfare of society at large, catastrophe seems to come all too close. (From a different perspective I write about this in my novella Requiem, remaining hopeful that sanity will prevail).
      The time has come to draft those who claim that Torah studies is their profession. When Ben Gurion accepted to let a small number of "Torah geniuses" be exempt from army service, he probably did not predict that this would be used by tens of thousands, assisted by narrow-minded politicians. National service as fire fighters and as sanitarians in the hospitals would be a socially appropriate manifestation of a true religious approach.