The Unshuttered Heart: Opening Aliveness/Deadness in the Self

The Unshuttered Heart: Opening Aliveness/Deadness in the Self

by Ann Belford Ulanov
The Unshuttered Heart: Opening Aliveness/Deadness in the Self

The Unshuttered Heart: Opening Aliveness/Deadness in the Self

by Ann Belford Ulanov

Paperback(Paperback)

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Overview

Aliveness and Deadness are processes that cannot be captured, only symbolized within the precincts of psychology and religion.Opening under the shadow of 9/11, our new century must reassess the preciousness of life and what we are living for, what we love, and what we find worth dying for. In the face of loss and absence, we must again ask what makes us feel connected to the source of aliveness. Yet, we must also understand that feeling fully alive means that we must come to fresh insight about the contrary of aliveness, which is deadness. Both aliveness and deadness are part of the same fabric of being. But how do we talk about them? Or do we leave these unnamed? For Ann Belford Ulanov, aliveness is to make something of what we hear, and to hear what we hear makes of us. Working on oneself enlarges; thus, society as psychological work and spiritual practice form a kind of social action. Our heart becomes unshuttered making new depths possible for the self and others.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780687494668
Publisher: Abingdon Press
Publication date: 10/01/2007
Edition description: Paperback
Pages: 250
Sales rank: 875,017
Product dimensions: 7.19(w) x 8.99(h) x 0.71(d)

Table of Contents


Introduction     ix
Aliveness/Deadness     1
New Century and Millennium     2
Clinical and Religious Perspectives     3
Deadness     8
Deadness as Loss of Subjectivity     11
Deadness as Loss of Objectivity     14
Aliveness     15
New Kind of Consciousness     20
Ingredients     24
Regeneration     29
Method     29
Deadness     37
Deadness Contributing to Aliveness     42
Aliveness: Regeneration     46
Double Vision     50
Consequences for Clinical Work of Our Spiritual Location     57
Spirituality     57
Analysis     64
Madness and Hatred of the Spiritual     67
The Consequences of Our Spiritual Location for Clinical Work     73
The Unshuttered Heart     89
Religion and Psychology     91
The Feminine Mode of Being     94
Identification     97
Disidentification     100
Differentiating and Attending     104
Spiritual Objects: From Self to Soul and Back Again     107
Space     107
Adults andTransitional Objects That Become Spiritual Objects     109
Spiritual Objects     114
Madness and Spiritual Objects     120
Spiritual Subjects, and Building Up Reality     126
Evil     135
Images of Evil     135
Logic and Location of Evil     137
Evil from the Psychoanalytical Perspective     138
Evil, Psyche, and Society     140
The Hinge of Evil     141
Archetypal Patterns of Evil     146
The Third in the Shadow of the Fourth     157
Brief Review of Literature     157
Jung and the Third     162
Jung and the Fourth     168
Living the Fourth     173
Three and Four     178
What Is the Self Engineering?     187
Mapping the Self     188
A Guiding Question     189
Ego and Self Tasks     192
Healing     196
The Ego's Role     199
The Self's Role     200
Naming     203
Livingness     206
Beyond the Self: No-Thing: Abyss and Beginnings     213
Resistance     215
Symbolic Death and the No-Thing Place      218
Gap     218
Shadow     220
Beyond Self     224
Deus Absconditus     228
Slime     234
A New Kind of Consciousness     238
Index     245
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