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Archetypes by jean shinoda bolen

Below are the best resources we could find on Archetypes featuring jean shinoda bolen.

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Goddesses in Everywoman: Powerful Archetypes in Women’s Lives

Myths are fascinating stories that become even more intriguing when we realize that they can reveal intimate truths about ourselves and others. Jean Shinoda Bolen brings the Greek pantheon to life as our inner archetypes and applies the power of myth to our personal lives.

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55:30

Jungian Analyst/Author Jean Bolen: Indomitable Spirit in Activists and the Archetype of Artemis

Featuring Jungian Analyst, Author and Activist Jean Shinoda Bolen, MD and her latest book Artemis The Indomitable Spirit in Everywoman, presented at the UN Commission on the Status of Women 59 (2015), in support of a Fifth World Conference on Women (5WCW).

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Ring of Power

A vivid grasp of the story and the characters in “The Ring of Niebelung” brings Richard Wagner’s mythic four-opera cycle to life.

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Artemis: The Indomitable Spirit in Everywoman

Worshiped in Ancient Greece as a protectress of young girls, Artemis was the goddess of hunting, nature, and chastity—the original “wild woman.

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Goddesses in Older Women: Archetypes in Women over Fifty

What’s next for the getting-older generation of women who have been redefining themselves each decade? Women turn 50 and cross into uncharted territory.

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Gods in Everyman: Archetypes that Shape Men’s Lives and Loves

A Jungian analyst, Dr. Bolen introduces our inner patterns in the guise of eight archetypal gods. From the authoritarian, power-seeking gods (Zeus, Poseidon) to the gods of creativity (Apollo, Hephaestus) to the sensual Dionysis, Dr.

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04:33

Jean Shinoda Bolen: Archetypal Psychology (Excerpt) - A Thinking Allowed W/ Dr. Jeffrey Mishlove

Carl Jung's concept of synchronicity, an acausal principle, connects the ego to the larger archetypal self. This connection is like the ancient Chinese concept of the Tao in that it cannot be rationally understood.

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The Women’s March on Washington: Pink Pussyhats—Enantiodromia

Until the marches, “pussy” was treated like a four-letter dirty word. What followed, as women responded to the crass reference to them as a body part, became an enantiodromia—a derogatory and shameful word became transformed into its opposite.

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Jungian Analysis