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Visions in the night; Jungian and ancient dream interpretation

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: (Studies in Jungian psychology by Jungian analysts; 91)Toronto Inner City Books c2000Edition: 2d ed., revDescription: 128p.; appendix; glossary; bibliogContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0-919123-92-9
Subject(s):
Contents:
1. Dreams in ancient tradition. 2. The dream as personal prophecy. Gabriel: the master of dreams. Ordinary dreams. Individual destiny. In search of the miraculous. Which dreams should be interpreted. The concerns of dreams. The moral instinct in dreams. The inner child in dreams. The symbolic language of dreams. 3. The dream interpreter. Who interprets?. A joint effort. The dream interpreter as advisor. The luck factor. The wounded healer. Qualifications of the healer. Vocational hazards. The question of the fee. 4. The art of positive dream interpretation. The danger of negative forecasting. A two-step process. The next step: the action plan. A sense of the future. The inner advisor. Looking for love. Mirroring the self. The voice of conscience. Reversal of fortune. Dream incubation. Appendix: A Jewish Theory of dream interpretation Pitron chalomot (The interpretation of dreams) by Solomon Almoli
Abstract: '...examines ancient, medieval and modern literature for insights into the nature of dreams, illuminating a Jungian approach to the role of dreamwork in the analytic process.'
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1st ed. pub. as Visions of the night; a study of Jewish dream interpretation by Shambhala Pubs., Boston, c1999.

1. Dreams in ancient tradition. 2. The dream as personal prophecy. Gabriel: the master of dreams. Ordinary dreams. Individual destiny. In search of the miraculous. Which dreams should be interpreted. The concerns of dreams. The moral instinct in dreams. The inner child in dreams. The symbolic language of dreams. 3. The dream interpreter. Who interprets?. A joint effort. The dream interpreter as advisor. The luck factor. The wounded healer. Qualifications of the healer. Vocational hazards. The question of the fee. 4. The art of positive dream interpretation. The danger of negative forecasting. A two-step process. The next step: the action plan. A sense of the future. The inner advisor. Looking for love. Mirroring the self. The voice of conscience. Reversal of fortune. Dream incubation. Appendix: A Jewish Theory of dream interpretation Pitron chalomot (The interpretation of dreams) by Solomon Almoli

'...examines ancient, medieval and modern literature for insights into the nature of dreams, illuminating a Jungian approach to the role of dreamwork in the analytic process.'

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