<p>"<em>Jungian Reflections on Systematic Racism: Members of an American Psychoanalytic Community on Training, Practice, and Inclusivity </em>is a unique new book co-edited by Jungian Psychoanalysts Christopher Carter and Tiffany Houck-Loomis, both members of the Jungian Psychoanalytic Association (NY). The brilliant uniqueness of this book is its' stellar light shone on the darkness of the racialized aspects of Jungian training that is seen in print. Bravo! For the courage of the book's authors. This book belongs on the shelf of every psychoanalyst in training and every professional in the field of Psychology"</p><p><strong>Dr. Fanny Brewster</strong><em>,<strong> </strong>Jungian Analyst, Professor at Pacifica Graduate Instittue, and author of</em> The Racial Complex: A Jungian Perspective on Culture and Race<em> (Routledge, 2019)</em></p><p>"Christopher J. Carter and Tiffany Houck-Loomis' wonderful book, <em>Jungian Reflections on Systemic Racism, </em>provides a container for our potential encounters with Jung's relations to racialized cultural complexes that appear both in his writings and in analytic training institutes. The contributors find that some of C.G. Jung's writings appear to mirror colonial attitudes, a kind of Social Darwinism, even as Jung's writings offer a theory of individuation as a potential. Reflecting upon Jung, this book's contributors make space and give voice to their encounters with the unconcious, exemplifying ways of working with our own racialized complexes"</p><p><strong>Samuel Kimbles, PhD</strong><em>, author of</em> Intergenerational Complexes in Analytical Psychology: The Suffering of Ghosts<em> (Routledge, 2021)</em></p><p>"<em>Jungian Reflections on Systemic Racism </em>is a hugely significant and original volume. Based on experiences in Jungian analysis and institutional life, but going beyond that community to embrace all approaches to psychotherapy, it offers a demonstration of how to divest our profession from its role in systemic- and casual- racism. With great frankness, the authors consider individual attitudes, responsibilities, and roles. This is the basis on which they seek to reframe approaches, teachings, and writings on ethnic, cultural and social dimensions of experience in therapy and society"</p><p><strong>Andrew Samuels</strong><em>,</em><strong> </strong><em>author of</em> The Political Psyche <em>(Routledge, 2015) and</em> A New Therapy for Politics? <em>(Routledge, 2015)</em></p>
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Christopher Jerome Carter, MDiv, ThM, PhD, LP, NCPsyA is certified in Jungian analysis and is a licensed psychoanalyst practicing in New York. He is member of the International Association for Analytical Psychology (IAAP), the National Association for the Advancement of Analytic Psychology (NAAP), and the Jungian Psychoanalytic Association. âTime for Space at the Table: An African American-Native American analyst-intrainingâs first-hand reflections. A call for the IAAP to publicly denounce (but not erase) the White supremacist writings of C.G. Jungâ was honored with the 2021 Gradiva Award (NAAP).
Tiffany Houck, MDiv, PhD, LP is a licensed psychoanalyst and a certified Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City. She is the author of History Through Trauma: History and Counter-History in the Hebrew Bible (2018, Wipf and Stock Publishers); as well as numerous journal articles and book chapters published at the intersection of studies in gender and sexuality, psychoanalysis, religion, and trauma. She serves as a faculty member and the current Director of Training of the Jungian Psychoanalytic Association.