ABSTRACT

The first edition of this illuminating study, addressed both to readers new to Jung and to those already familiar with his work, offered fresh insights into a fundamental concept of analytical psychology. This revised edition has been fully updated to reflect the publication of the DSM-5.

Craig Stephenson anatomizes Jung’s concept of possession, reinvesting Jungian psychotherapy with its positive potential for practice. Analogizing the concept – lining it up comparatively beside the history of religion, anthropology, psychiatry, and even drama and film criticism – offers not a naive syncretism, but enlightening possibilities along the borders of these diverse disciplines.

An original, wide-ranging exploration of phenomena both ancient and modern, Possession offers a conceptual bridge between psychology and anthropology, challenges psychiatry to culturally contextualize its diagnostic manual, and posits a much more fluid, pluralistic and embodied notion of selfhood. It will prove essential reading for Jungian psychotherapists, analytical and depth psychologists and psychiatrists as well as academics and students of anthropology, mythology and religious studies.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction: Jung's concept of possession

An organic approximation

chapter 1|36 pages

The possessions at Loudun

Tracking the discourse of possession

chapter 2|30 pages

The anthropology of possession

Studying the Other

chapter 3|26 pages

Possession enters the discourse of psychiatry

Epistemological break or recuperation?

chapter 4|20 pages

Reading Jung's equivocal language

chapter 6|12 pages

The suffering of Myrtle Gordon

Cassavetes's Opening Night and Chaikin's Open Theatre

chapter 7|4 pages

Closing