I've not seen this yet, but a two and half hour lecture that Hillman delivered at Pacifica Graduate Institute in December 2009 is available on DVD through Depth Video here. I have a note from a colleague as follows: "Did you get to see the DVD of Hillman's recent talk at Pacifica on the Red Book? You are one of the few writers he quotes during his long lecture on the Red Book." Needless to say I am flattered & delighted. Hillman was among the first people to read the draft of my first book on Corbin and has been a source of encouragement and support for many years. I am deeply grateful to him. He has said that the three founding figures of his archetypal psychology are Freud, Jung and Henry Corbin.
The description of the lecture is as follows:
The emergence of C.G. Jung’s Red Book from years of storage in a Swiss vault has re-kindled interest in active imagination. This method of self-exploration involves actively engaging one’s own imagination in dialogue, through writing, art, or the spoken word.
In this 3-hour DVD, James Hillman —noted author, psychologist, and the first Director of Studies at the Jung Institute in Zurich — introduces the method and delves deeply into the therapeutic value it offers in an increasingly noisy and demanding world.
Hillman considers the history and theory of active imagination in Jung, its relationship to making art, and offers examples for scrutiny and discussion. He discusses the fear of inviting demons and opening wounds, and addresses the difference between the voices of inner figures and auditory hallucinations. The major re-examination of Jung’s original ideas and inspiration doesn’t stop there, though. Hillman goes on to examine the role of imagination in contemporary culture, and whether imagination itself might need re-imagining.
Hillman’s seminar was taped December 9, 2009, in front of a sold-out audience at the Pacifica Graduate Institute in Santa Barbara, CA.
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