Course
Reader, REL 407/507 Buddhism and Psychotherapy
The
Field of Buddhism and Psychotherapy
1. Jeremy Safran,
"Introduction: Psychoanalysis and Buddhism as Cultural Institutions,"
Buddhism and Psychoanalysis (Boston: Wisdom
Publications, 2006), 1-33.
The meeting, similarities, and differences between
psychoanalytic and Buddhist culture.
2. Jack Engler, "Chapter 1: Being Somebody and
Being Nobody," Buddhism and Psychoanalysis, 35-79.
Self and No-self in North American Buddhism and
Psychotherapy by a leading psychiatrist and Vipassana
practitioner.
3. Robin Hertz, "Science-ing Mindfulness: The
Influence of Psychological Science in the Production of Modern
Mindfulness," REL 605 directed reading final paper, 1-7.
Critical examination of the "mindfulness" boom in
North America.
C. G. Jung's Archetypal Psychology and the Shadow Side of the Self
3. Radmila Moacanin,
"Chapter 2: C. G. Jung," Jung's Psychology and Tibetan Buddhism (Boston:
Wisdom Publications, 2002), 24-41.
Overview of Jung's archetypal psychology.
4. Connie Zweig, "Prologue; Connie Zweig & Jeremiah Abrams,
"Introduction: The Shadow Side of Everyday Life," Meeting
the Shadow (Los Angeles: Jeremy Tarcher,
1990), xiv-xxv
Exploring the dark side of the self
5. Katy Butler, "29. Encountering the Shadow in Buddhist America," Meeting
the Shadow, 136-147.
The cases of Richard Baker at San Francisco Zen Center
and Chogyam Trungpa at Naropa.
Tibetan Buddhism and Psychotherapy
6. C. G. Jung, "Psychological Commentary on the Tibetan Book of the Great
Liberation," Psychology and the East, trans.
R.F.C. Hull (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1978), 103-137.
Jung's explication of this Tibetan Buddhist work, comparing and contrasting it's view of mind with his own psychological model.
7. Karen Kissel Wegela,
"Hearing More than the Words: The Phenomenon of Exchange,"
pre-publication draft, 1-10.
Essay on the philosophy and method of the Contemplative Psychotherapy Program, Naropa University.
Zen Buddhism, Shin Buddhism, and Psychotherapy
8. Henry Shukman, "Light and Dark: Koans and Dreams," Spring:
A Journal of Archetype and Culture, vol. 89, 15-23.
Transformative power of the narrative of awakening.
9. Mokusen Miyuki, "Deep/Hearing: Buddha
Way/Symbolic Life," pre-publication draft, 1-11.
Zen Buddhism, Shin Buddhism, and Jung's Archetypal Psychology.
10. Anne Spencer, "The Flowers Scatter," pre-publication draft,
pre-publication draft, 1-5
Shin Buddhism and genetic counseling.
Beyond the Box
11. Shoko Sugao, "An Abortion's Influence
on a Woman: Confrontation with Death," pre-publication draft, 1-5.
Japanese practice of mizuko kuyo, offerings to an unborn fetus, examined
within a psychological framework.
12. Oliver Sacks, An Anthropologist on Mars (New
York: Random House, 1996), 244-295.
Oliver Sack's account of Temple Grandin,
professor and activist in the field of animal husbandry, and also autistic.
13. Temple Grandin, Thinking in Pictures and
Other Reports from My Life with Autism (NY: Random House), 191-206.
Temple Grandin's own account focusing on her views on
religion including Zen Buddhism.