ABSTRACT

Winner of the 2021 American Board & Academy of Psychoanalysis Annual Book Prize for Best Theoretical Book in Psychoanalysis!

Stanton Marlan brings together writings which span the course of his career, examining Jungian psychology and the alchemical imagination as an opening to the mysteries of psyche and soul.

Several chapters describe a telos that aims at the mysterious goal of the Philosophers’ Stone, a move replete with classical and postmodern ideas catalysed by prompts from the unconscious: dreams, images, fantasies, and paradoxical conundrums. Psyche and matter are seen with regards to soul, light and darkness in terms of illumination, and order and chaos as linked in the image of chaosmos. Marlan explores the richness of the alchemical ideas of Carl Jung, James Hillman, and others and their value for a revisioning of psychology. In doing so, this volume challenges any tendency to literalism and essentialism, and contributes to an integration between Jung’s classical vision of a psychology of alchemy and Hillman’s Alchemical Psychology.

C.G. Jung and the Alchemical Imagination will be a valuable resource for academics, scholars, and students of Jungian and post-Jungian studies, Jungian analysis, and psychotherapy. It will also be of great interest to Jungian psychologists and Jungian analysts in practice and in training.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|18 pages

Jung and alchemy

A daimonic reading

chapter Chapter 3|23 pages

Fire in the stone

An inquiry into the alchemy of soul-making

chapter Chapter 4|22 pages

Salt and the alchemical soul

Freudian, Jungian, and archetypal perspectives

chapter Chapter 7|9 pages

Facing the shadow

Turning toward the darkness of the nigredo

chapter Chapter 8|14 pages

The black sun

chapter Chapter 9|23 pages

From the black sun to the Philosophers’ Stone

chapter Chapter 10|14 pages

A critique of Wolfgang Giegerich’s move from imagination to the logical life of the soul

Part A. The psychologist who is not a psychologist: a deconstructive reading of Wolfgang Giegerich’s idea of psychology proper

chapter Chapter 10|16 pages

A critique of Wolfgang Giegerich’s move from imagination to the logical life of the soul

Part B. The absolute that is not absolute: an alchemical reflection on the Caput Mortuum, the dark other of logical light

chapter Chapter 12|13 pages

The Philosophers’ Stone as chaosmos

The Self and the dilemma of diversity

chapter Chapter 13|7 pages

The Azure Vault

Alchemy and the cosmological imagination

chapter Chapter 14|17 pages

Divine Darkness and Divine Light

Alchemical illumination and the mystical play between knowing and unknowing