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The Alchemy of Discourse - Image, Sound and Psyche

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In recent years the function of language, narrative and text in psychic life has taken on increasing significance in depth psychology. The Alchemy of Discourse examines language in relation to psychic formation, beginning with the role played by images and words in the onset of subjectivity. Through a careful examination of Jung’s early word association experiments coupled with recent developments in Lacanian psychoanalysis, Dr. Kugler offers a re-conceptualization of the origin and function of the Jungian divided subject (ego/self). For those just beginning to explore the role of language in psychic life, The Alchemy of Discourse provides an accessible entry point, with its clear explication of key terms together with their historical and conceptual background. This book will be a valuable resource for psychoanalysts, students and trainees in depth psychology, and for writers, critical theorists, philosophers and historians of ideas.

«The gestural disposition of language, the freight it carries far beyond limits of simplifying “connotation,” the ground it shares with physical body and world are recognized here with subtle and perceptive intelligence. This work emphasizes Paul Kugler’s unique contribution both to his field and to that world of myriad people, who still hear what’s said as “what’s said.” »
– Robert Creeley

Paul Kugler is a psychoanalyst in private practice in East Aurora, New York. In the 1970’s he received his analytic training at the Jung Institute in Zurich and has taught at the State University of New York at Buffalo. A past president of the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts, he is the author of numerous publications articulating the interface between Freudian and Jungian psychoanalysis.

140 pages, Kindle Edition

First published November 1, 1982

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81 reviews
August 25, 2023
An interesting topic, but the author spent more time “re-saying” what others have, and not enough time proving his point.
1 chapter to drive home your reason for writing is just… ludicrous. Especially when the idea is intriguing
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