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Jung on the Hudson Faculty

Jan Bauer, M.A.

Lionel Corbett, M.D.

Guy Corneau, M.Ed.

Michael Gellert, M.A., M.S.W.

Andrew Harvey

Aryeh Maidenbaum, Ph.D.

Sylvia Brinton Perera, M.A.

Jeffrey Raff, Ph.D.

Manisha Roy, Ph.D.

Jeffrey Rubin, Ph.D.

Diana Rubin, L.C.S.W.

Ann Belford Ulanov, Ph.D.

 

Jung on the Hudson Faculty

Jan Bauer, M.A., earned Masters degrees in literature at the Sorbonne, and Adult Education at Boston University. A graduate of the Jung Institute of Zürich, she lives and practices in Quebec and teaches Jung groups throughout the U.S and Canada. Former Chair of Admissions and Director of Training for the Inter Regional Society of Jungian Analysts, her publications include Alcoholism and Women and Impossible Love.

Lionel Corbett, M.D., trained in medicine and psychiatry in England and as a Jungian analyst at the Jung Institute of Chicago. Dr. Corbett, a core faculty member at Pacifica Graduate Institute in Santa Barbara, California, is the author of numerous articles and books, including The Religious Function of the Psyche; Psyche and the Sacred, and Spirituality Beyond Religion.

Guy Corneau, M.Ed., Jungian analyst, is internationally recognized for his work on issues of masculine identity, and the meaning of crisis and illness. A popular and influential presence in the Canadian media, (hosting a weekly TV show, “Guy Corneau, en-toute confidence”) his many publications, include two books translated into English: Absent Fathers, Lost Sons and The Transformation of Spirit Through Intimacy.

Michael Gellert, M.A., M.S.W., is a Jungian analyst practicing in Los Angeles and Pasadena, California. Former Director of Training at the Jung Institute of Los Angeles, he has also taught at Vanier College, Montreal, and Hunter College of the City University of New York. A Zen practitioner for 30 years, his publications include Modern Mysticism; The Fate of America and, his most recent book, The Way of the Small.

Andrew Harvey, is a former fellow at All Souls College, Oxford, and has taught at Oxford, Cornell, Hobart and William Smith Colleges and the California Institute of Integral Studies. The subject of a BBC documentary, “The Making of A Mystic,” his many publications include Teachings of Rumi; The Way of Passion; The Return of the Mother; A Journey in Ladakh; The Essential Mystic, and his most recent book, The Direct Path.

Aryeh Maidenbaum, Ph.D., Jungian analyst and Director of the N.Y. Center for Jungian Studies, serves as a Special Consultant to The Jewish Museum of New York. Contributing author to Current Theories of Psychoanalysis, his publications include “The Search for Spirit in Jungian Psychology” and Jung and the Shadow of Anti-Semitism. Dr. Maidenbaum taught Jungian psychology at NYU for many years.

Sylvia Brinton Perera, M.A., Jungian analyst, lives, practices, writes, and teaches in New York and Vermont. On the faculty and Board of the Jung Institute of N.Y., she lectures and leads workshops internationally. Her publications include Descent to the Goddess: A Way of Initiation for Women; The Scapegoat Complex; Dreams, A Portal to the Source; Celtic Queen Maeve and Addiction: An Archetypal Perspective; and many clinical articles.

Jeffrey Raff, Ph.D., trained at the Jung Institute in Zürich and has been in private practice in the Denver area since 1976. Author of many books and articles, his publications include Jung and the Alchemical Imagination; The Wedding of Sophia, and The Practice of Ally Work. Most recently, Dr. Raff has explored the meaning of debilitating diseases since being struck with Gullaine-Barre syndrome in 2005.

Manisha Roy, Ph.D., born and brought up in India, is an anthropologist and Jungian analyst. A diplomate of the Jung Institute of Zürich, she has been in private practice for thirty years and is located now in Cambridge, Mass. Author of 25 articles and four books, her publications include Bengali Women; Cast the First Stone: Ethics in Analytic Practice, and The Reckoning Heart: An Anthropologist Looks at Her Worlds.

Jeffrey Rubin, Ph.D., in private practice in New York City and Bedford Hills, N.Y., has taught at Universities and Psychoanalytic Institutes; is a Training and Supervising Analyst, and lectures regularly on spirituality, the integration of meditation and psychotherapy and psychoanalytic theory and practice. Among his numerous publications are Psychotherapy and Buddhism; The Good Life, and A Psychoanalysis for Our Time.

Diana Rubin, L.C.S.W., Director of the N.Y. Center for Jungian Studies, was a staff psychotherapist at the Postgraduate Center’s Institute for the Performing Artist from 1992-1998. Currently, she is in private practice in New York City and New Paltz, N.Y., leads workshops and seminars on creativity and Mid-Life issues, and specializes in working with creative and performing artists in both individual and group therapy.

Ann Belford Ulanov, Ph.D., is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City, a member of the Jungian Psychoanalytic Association, and Christiane Brooks Johnson Professor of Psychiatry and Religion at Union Theological Seminary. Internationally recognized lecturer, she is the author of many books and articles, the latest of which are The UnShuttered Heart: Opening to Aliveness and Deadness in the Self, and “The Third in the Shadow of the Fourth,” in “The Journal of Analytical Psychology.”

 

 

14th Annual Jung on the Hudson

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The New York Center for Jungian Studies organizes, plans and produces conferences, seminars and events, based on the teachings of Carl Jung (CG Jung). Our Jungian seminars and conferences are held worldwide, including the following countries and cities: United States of America, New York, Rhinebeck, Dublin, Killarney, Kilkenny, Ireland, Israel. Our Jung on the Hudson Summer Seminar Series is held annually during the summer months. Our Annual Jung in Ireland event is held in Ireland every spring.

Aryeh Maidenbaum, Ph.D., is a former faculty member of NYU where, for many years, he taught courses on Jungian psychology. From 1982-1993 he was the Executive Director of the C.G. Jung Foundation of New York. A graduate of the Jung Institute of Zurich, he is a contributing author to Current Theories of Psychoanalysis (Robert Langs, ed.) and has written and co-authored several books and articles including “The Search for Spirit in Jungian Psychology,” “Psychological Type, Job Change and Personal Growth,” and "Lingering Shadows: Jungian, Freudians and anti-Semitism." His latest book, Jung and the Shadow of Anti-Semitism, is a collection of essays he has edited on this subject.