Jungian Dimensions of the Mourning Process, Burial Rituals and Access to the Land of the Dead

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ancestor veneration
Anthropologists
archetypal theory
Burial
Burial Rituals
Carl Jung
Category=JMAJ
CG Jung
Chicano Movement
Collective Individuation
Complicated Grief
cross-cultural mourning practices
cultural bereavement
Dead
Death
depth psychology
Disengage
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Face To Face
Fairy Tales
Follow
Homo Sacer
Human Suffering
Immortality
jung
Jungian
Liminal Beings
liminality studies
Mourning
Mourning Process
Mourning Reaction
Noh Plays
Omnipresent
Overburden
Pneumocystis Pneumonia
Psychoanalysts
Reborn
Rituals
Scarab Beetle
symbolic anthropology
Timeless
Transcendent Function
Unus Mundus
Violating
Wandering

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032321950
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Aug 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This innovative volume on the mourning process, burial rites and intimations of immortality offers diverse Jungian, cross-cultural, interdisciplinary, depth-psychological perspectives, written predominantly by graduates and candidates of the CG Jung Institute Zürich.

The themes of this book are particularly relevant as they relate to the COVID-19 pandemic and other environmental disasters, when so many people die without a proper burial and are, thus, not properly commemorated with their status value. The contributors cover a wide range of subjects from their clinical observations attached to grief and loss in the prolonged mourning process, the meaning behind burial rites in cyclical and linear temporalities and an analysis of why certain dead are excluded from becoming ancestors. Unconscious processes such as dreams, archetypes and cultural complexes from the personal and collective unconscious are also presented and explored.

This collection will be of great interest to interdisciplinary academic researchers, Jungian analysts and students, psychoanalysts, psychotherapists, anthropologists, cultural theorists and students interested in the mourning process, rites of passage, past and present burial practices and the imaginative, symbolic significance of the land of the dead.

Elizabeth Brodersen, PhD, is an accredited Jungian Training Analyst and Supervisor at the CGJI Zürich and currently a member of the Institute’s Research Commission. Elizabeth received her doctorate in psycho-social psychoanalytic studies at the University of Essex, UK, and works as a Jungian analyst in a private practice in Germany and Switzerland.