ABSTRACT

Michael Fordham's immense contribution to analytical psychology has been marked by its combination of practical and theoretical genius. Before retirement he ran a full clinical practice alongside the co-editorship of The Collected Works of Jung, development of the Society of Analytical Psychology and its child and adult trainings, and a fifteen-year editorship of the Journal of Analytical Psychology. In his published work there has emerged a consistent and original contribution to Jungian thought, particularly in relation to the processes of individuation on childhood, and the links between analytical psychology and the work of the Kleinians.

James Astor takes a critical and informed look at Fordham's work and ideas. Illustrating theory with examples drawn from clinical practice, the book will provide a useful amplification of Fordham's own work for students of analytical psychology and a sound introduction to it for analysts interested in understanding the connections between post-Jungian and post-Kleinian thought.

chapter |9 pages

Prologue

chapter |14 pages

Thinking into feeling

The person

chapter |8 pages

Jung's psychological model

chapter |9 pages

Jung and Fordham

chapter |12 pages

The self in infancy and childhood

Pioneering discoveries

chapter |18 pages

Ego development in infancy and childhood

The integration of observational research

chapter |16 pages

Archetypes

Their biological basis and actions of the self

chapter |16 pages

Autism

A disorder of the self

chapter |13 pages

Synchronicity

An interpretation