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Awakening and insight

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Buddhism first came to the West many centuries ago through the Greeks, who also influenced some of the culture and practices of Indian Buddhism. As Buddhism has spread beyond India, it has always been affected by the indigenous traditions of its new homes. When Buddhism appeared in America and Europe in the 1950s and 1960s, it encountered contemporary psychology and psychotherapy, rather than religious traditions. Since the 1990s, many efforts have been made by Westerners to analyze and integrate the similarities and differences between Buddhism and it therapeutic ancestors, particularly Jungian psychology. Taking Japanese Zen-Buddhism as its starting point, this volume is a collection of critiques, commentaries, and histories about a particular meeting of Buddhism and psychology. It is based on the Zen Buddhism and Psychotherapy conference that took place in Kyoto, Japan, in 1999, expanded by additional papers, and includes: new perspectives on Buddhism and psychology, East and West cautions and insights about potential confusions traditional ideas in a new light. It also features a new translation of the conversation between Schin'ichi Hisamatsu and Carl Jung which took place in 1958. Awakening and Insight expresses a meeting of minds, Japanese and Western, in a way that opens new questions about and sheds new light on our subjective lives. It will be of great interest to students, scholars and practitioners of psychotherapy, psychoanalysis, and analytical psychology, as well as anyone involved in Zen Buddhism.

Title Awakening and insight : Zen Buddhism and psychotherapy / editors, Polly Young-Eisendrath, Shoji Muramoto.
Publisher Howe, East Sussex
New York : Brunner-Routledge
Creation Date 2002
Notes Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
English
Content Book Cover
Title
Contents
Acknowledgements
Notes on the contributors
Introduction Continuing a conversation from East to West: Buddhism and psychotherapy
New perspectives on Buddhism and psychology East and West
Buddhism, religion and psychotherapy in the world today
A Buddhist model of the human self: working through the Jung-Hisamatsu discussion
Jung, Christianity, and Buddhism
The transformation of human suffering: a perspective from psychotherapy and Buddhism
Zen and psychotherapy: from neutrality, through relationship, to the emptying place
A mindful self and beyond: sharing in the ongoing dialogue of Buddhism and psychoanalysis
Cautions and insights about potential confusions
The Jung-Hisamatsu conversation TRANSLATED FROM ANIELA JAFF'S ORIGINAL GERMAN PROTOCOL BY SHOJI MURAMOTO IN COLLABORATION WITH POLLY YOUNG-EISENDRATH AND JAN MIDDELDORF
Jung and Buddhism
What is I? Reflections from Buddhism and psychotherapy
American Zen and psychotherapy: an ongoing dialogue
Locating Buddhism, locating psychology
Buddhism and psychotherapy in the West: Nishitani and dialectical behavior therapy
Traditional ideas in a new light
Karma and individuation: the boy with no face
The Consciousness-only school: an introduction and a brief comparison with Jung's psychology
The problematic of mind in Gotama Buddha
The development of Buddhist psychology in modern Japan
Coming home: the difference it makes
Index
Extent 1 online resource (x, 273 pages)
Language English
National Library system number 997010708072005171
MARC RECORDS

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