Creativity and Individuation: The Insights of Egyptian Creation Myths
This lecture examines some of the Egyptian genesis myths as a people’s musings on the embodied human life, the embraced creative process, and self re-creation through engagement with the inner and outer worlds in the work of consciousness.
Image Source: Drawing by Daniel Hornschemeier Bandstra based on a tomb painting in Valley of the Kings, Thebes. From H. Haas, Bilderatlas zur Religionsgeschichte (Leipzig: 1923)
Additional information
Audio Format
File Size: 45MB
Speaker
Zabriskie, Beverley
Beverley Zabriskie, MSW is a Jungian Analyst in New York
City, where she is a founding faculty member and former President of the
Jungian Psychoanalytic Association (JPA). She is a frequent national
and international lecturer, and is the author of numerous journal
articles and book chapters, including “A Meeting of Rare Minds”, the
Preface to Atom and Archetype. The Pauli-Jung Correspondence.(2001,
Princeton University Press,) Her most recent essays include “Energy and
Emotion: C. G. Jung’s Fordham Declaration” (In press, 2015, Spring
Journal Books) in Jung in the Academy and Beyond: The Fordham Lectures 100 Years later, “Time and Tao in Synchronicity” in The Pauli-Jung Conjecture and Its Impact Today (2014, Imprint Academic); “Psychic
energy and synchronicity” (April 2014, Journal of Analytical Psychology)
As the 2007 Fay Lecturer at Texas A&M University, she presented the
lecture series, Emotion and Transformation: From Myth to Neuroscience.
She was named 2002 Psychoanalytic Educator of the Year for the
International Federation of Psychoanalytic Education.