ABSTRACT

"I have entitled this book For Love of the Imagination. Long ago, I fell in love with the imagination. It was love at first sight. I have had a lifelong love affair with the imagination. I would love for others, through this book, to fall in love, as I once did, with the imagination." Michael Vannoy Adams, from the Preface.

For Love of the Imagination is a book about the imagination – about what and how images mean. Jungian psychoanalysis is an imaginal psychology – or what Michael Vannoy Adams calls "imaginology," the study of the imagination. What is so distinctive – and so valuable – about Jungian psychoanalysis is that it emphasizes images.

For Love of the Imagination is also a book about interdisciplinary applications of Jungian psychoanalysis. What enables these applications is that all disciplines include images of which they are more or less unconscious. Jungian psychoanalysis is in an enviable position to render these images conscious, to specify what and how they mean.

On the contemporary scene, as a result of the digital revolution, there is no trendier word than "applications" – except, perhaps, the abbreviation "apps." In psychoanalysis, there is a "Freudian app" and a "Jungian app." The "Jungian app" is a technology of the imagination. This book applies Jungian psychoanalysis to images in a variety of disciplines. For Love of the Imagination also includes the 2011 Moscow lectures on Jungian psychoanalysis. It will be essential reading for psychoanalysts, psychotherapists, students, and those with an interest in Jung. 

 

part I|80 pages

Imaginal Psychology

chapter 1|11 pages

For Love of the Imagination

Why I Became a Psychotherapist

chapter 2|14 pages

Imaginology

The Jungian Study of the Imagination

chapter 3|44 pages

Imaginology Overboard with a Shark and an Octopus

How to Do Things with Images that Do Things

chapter 4|9 pages

Golden Calf Psychology

James Hillman Alone in Pursuit of the Imagination

part II|97 pages

Jungian Interdisciplinary Applications

chapter |21 pages

Cultural Applications

chapter 6|8 pages

The Sable Venus on the Middle Passage

Images of the Transatlantic Slave Trade

chapter |34 pages

Economic and Political Applications

chapter 7|11 pages

The Invisible Hand and the Economic Unconscious

The Most Important Image of the Last 250 Years

chapter 8|22 pages

Obama and Icarus

Political Heroism, “Newspaper Mythology,” and the Economic Crisis of 2008

chapter |39 pages

Literary and Artistic Applications

chapter 9|14 pages

Getting a Kick out of Captain Ahab

The Merman Dream in Moby-Dick

chapter 10|13 pages

“It was all A Mistake”

Jung's Postcards to Ernest Jones and Kipling's Short Story “The Phantom 'Rickshaw”

chapter 11|11 pages

William Blake, Visionary Art, and the Return of Odysseus

Homeric Mythology, Neoplatonic Philosophy, and Jungian Psychology

part III|49 pages

The 2011 Moscow Lectures on Jungian Psychoanalysis

chapter 12|15 pages

The mythological Unconscious in Moscow

A Dream of a Russian-American Woman in New York

chapter 13|13 pages

The Metaphor of Metamorphosis

Change in Myth and Psyche

chapter 14|19 pages

O Baal, Hear Us

Active Imagination and the Mythological Unconscious