The Archetypal Psychology of James Hillman: Re-Visioning the . . . As the founder of archetypal psychology, Hillman sought to revive and re-imagine the core insights of C G Jung, liberating them from clinical and conceptual constraints to reveal their transformative implications for the broader culture
On Soul, Character and Calling : A Conversation with James . . . Hillman: Yes, but calling can refer not only to ways of doing — meaning work — but also to ways of being Take being a friend Goethe said that his friend Eckermann was born for friendship Aristotle made friendship one of the great virtues In his book on ethics, three or four chapters are on friendship In the past, friendship was a huge
ADMA DHEURLE AND JOEL N. FEIMER - JSTOR "archetypal psychology" reflects his concern over the stagnation that accrues from staying wholly with one thinker and remaining a Jungian,2 as well as his commitment to the spirit of Jung and the grand tradition of imaginative psychology Hillman wrote in 1970: It seems right to turn to a word that does reflect the characteristic
James Hillman: Psychology, Archetypes, Mythology Hillman expanded upon Carl Gustav Jung’s foundational insights into the archetypal dimensions of the human psyche, pushing the boundaries to establish a psychology deeply rooted in myth and imagination
More Reflections on James Hillman’s Archetypal Psychology Hillman demands that we stay close to the practical effects of our abstractions by paying attention to the power of archetypes to recursively shape both the creation of theories and the discovery of facts: an archetype is both a way of seeing and a thing seen
Mystic Descent: James Hillman and the Religious Imagination Hillman’s archetypal approach offers us several pathways into this correlation between mysticism and the feminine soul or what has been called the “lunar mind” (Avens 1984, 125)
James Hillman as Researcher of Psyche as Image and Myth Hillman's contribution lies in his "imaginal reduction"-relating of images to their archetypal background in Greek mythology Myth is seen as the maker of the psyche, and, in turn, the soul-making is poesis-a return to the imaginal and poetic basis of consciousness