Introduction 1. Jung and Sex 2. Sex and Analysis 3. "A Subjective Confession": Jung as Liberator and Moralist 4. Splitting Off Sex Therapy 5. "An Initiation into the Realm of Darkness" 6. The Spokesman and The Injured Deity 7. Re-Visioning Sex 8. The Mysterium References Appendices Index
Edward Santana, Ph.D. is a Registered Psychotherapist and director of a doctoral program in psychotherapy. He was executive director of the Ontario division of the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy (AAMFT) and maintained a private practice in Toronto, Canada. He formerly worked as a clinical program supervisor, public relations executive, and congressional staff member. He currently lives and practices in Southern California.
"While glaringly obvious in our culture, sex and sexuality are
still only dimly understood: it is everywhere visible, subject to
moralism, studied by psychologists, used and abused in advertising,
confusing to adolescents, frightening to some, suffered by many in
symptomatic forms. But Edward Santana covers the ground – from
struggles between culture and instinct to pharmaceuticals and
technology – in this brilliant study of Jung’s work, contemporary
psychological treatment, and the importance of recognizing sexual
life as a deep, exquisite expression of the human soul." – Lyn
Cowan, Ph.D., Jungian analyst"This book should be required reading
for any psychotherapist who treats people suffering from sexual
difficulties. It will fill a void in the Jungian literature on
sexuality. Dr. Santana's stress on the spiritual dimensions of
sexuality is a necessary corrective to purely behavioral
approaches." - Lionel Corbett, M.D., Jungian Analyst"Edward
Santana’s Jung and Sex effectively answers the question: what would
a nineteenth century born psychologist have to contribute to the
field of sexual studies and therapeutic treatment, especially in an
era dominated by behaviorism and cognitive psychologies? Jung not
only repositions human sexuality through the biological and social
into the realm of the spiritual but affirms that a sexual problem
can only be solved by love, that is, by an engagement with the
meaning dimension. This book asks the reader to approach the
mystery of sex with a willingness to submit to psyche, a Greek word
which translates as Soul." - James Hollis, Ph.D., is a Jungian
analyst in Washington, D.C., and author of numerous books, most
recently, What Matters Most: Living a More Considered Life, and
Hauntings: Dispelling the Ghosts Who Run Our Lives.
"While glaringly obvious in our culture, sex and sexuality are
still only dimly understood: it is everywhere visible, subject to
moralism, studied by psychologists, used and abused in advertising,
confusing to adolescents, frightening to some, suffered by many in
symptomatic forms. But Edward Santana covers the ground – from
struggles between culture and instinct to pharmaceuticals and
technology – in this brilliant study of Jung’s work, contemporary
psychological treatment, and the importance of recognizing sexual
life as a deep, exquisite expression of the human soul." – Lyn
Cowan, Ph.D., Jungian analyst"This book should be required reading
for any psychotherapist who treats people suffering from sexual
difficulties. It will fill a void in the Jungian literature on
sexuality. Dr. Santana's stress on the spiritual dimensions of
sexuality is a necessary corrective to purely behavioral
approaches." - Lionel Corbett, M.D., Jungian Analyst"Edward
Santana’s Jung and Sex effectively answers the question: what would
a nineteenth century born psychologist have to contribute to the
field of sexual studies and therapeutic treatment, especially in an
era dominated by behaviorism and cognitive psychologies? Jung not
only repositions human sexuality through the biological and social
into the realm of the spiritual but affirms that a sexual problem
can only be solved by love, that is, by an engagement with the
meaning dimension. This book asks the reader to approach the
mystery of sex with a willingness to submit to psyche, a Greek word
which translates as Soul." - James Hollis, Ph.D., is a Jungian
analyst in Washington, D.C., and author of numerous books, most
recently, What Matters Most: Living a More Considered Life, and
Hauntings: Dispelling the Ghosts Who Run Our Lives."Edward Santana,
in his brave book Jung and Sex, does something that is long
overdue: a critical review of the moralism that has affected the
Jungian community... a magnificent effort to renew our thinking
about the spiritual dimensions of sexuality. The style is
jargon-free, pleasant and sharp!” Ginette Paris, Ph.D., author of
Wisdom of the Psyche: Beyond Neuroscience
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