Introduction: C.G. Jung and the Humanities Philip T. Zabriskie A: MYTHOLOGY 1. Mind and Matter in Myth Eileen Preston 2. Archetypal Politics in European History: Elemire Zolla B: RELIGION 1. Jung's Impact on the Discipline John Patrick Dourley 2. Gnosticism and Culture Gilles Quispel C: ANTHROPOLOGY: THE TRICKSTER 1. The Trickster and the Sacred Clown Thomas Belmonte 2. Jung Contra Freud: What It Means To Be Funny Stanley Diamond D: THE ARCHITECTURE 1. Individuation, Entropy, and Creativity: Recurring Cycles in the History of Architecture Ann Griswold Tyng 2. The Image of the Vessel in Frank Lloyd Wright's Work Neil Levine 3. C.G. Jung and the Temple: Symbol of Wholeness John Lundquist E: POPULAR CULTURE 1. Symposium John Carlin, Leslie Fiedler, Harold Schechter 2. Folk Theater, the Community, and the Symbols of the Unconscious Dinnah Pladott PART TWO. CREATIVITY A: IMAGINATION 1. The Active Imagination: Symposium Breaking the Rules Lucia Pozzi The Road to Mecca Robert Bly On Creativity Joseph Cambell Discussion 2. On William Blake: Reason Versus Imagination June Singer B: ART 1. Meaning in Art Stephen A. Martin 2. Jung and Abstract Expressionism Terree Grabenhorst-Randall 3. Artists' Roundtable: Jung's Influence Ibram Lassaw, Robert Richenburg, Mark Hasselriis C: DANCE AND THEATER 1. Jean Erdman's Dances: Journeys of Body and Soul Deborah Welsh, Jean Erdman 2. Twelve Dreams by James Lapine: Enactment as Theory/Text/Performance Linda Huntington D: LITERATURE 1. Jungian Literary Criticism 1920-1980 Jos Van Meurs 2. An Archetypal Reading of Oedipus Rex Karin Barnaby Pellegrino D'Acierno 3. Jung and His Brothers Evans Lansing Smith PART THREE: POST_JUNGIAN CONTRIBUTIONS A: GENDER ISSUES 1. Enlightening Shadows: The Relation between Feminism and Archetypalism Carol S. Rupprecht 2. C.G. Jung and the Feminine Beverley Zabriskie 3. Beyond the Feminine Principle: A Post-Jungian Viewpoint Andrew Samuels B: POST_MODERNISM 1. Symposium: Introduction James Hillman 2. Towards a Post-Modern Depth Psychology Paul Kugler Jung and the Post-Modern Condition Edward Casey An Other Jung and An Other David L. Miller Discussion