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MS 608: Islamic Traditions
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
This course explores the major historical traditions of Islam, including Sufism, as well as modern religous movements. Special attention is given to central themes in the Qur'an and the life of Mohammad. The cultural clash between Islam and the West is also examined.
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MS 608 - Islamic Traditions
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ms 611: Post-Jungian & Archetypal Theories
3.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
The depth psychology of C. G. Jung and his successors enables us to see how mythology expresses psychology and how psychology may be understood as mythology. Special attention is given to insights from James Hillman's archetypal psychology, including the notions of personifying, pathologizing, psychologizing, and de-humanizing. The works of other post-Jungian writiers are also examined to exemplify selected aspects of the atchetypal approach.
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ms 611 - Post-Jungian & Archetypal Theories
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MS 614: Cultural Mythologies II
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Psychological life is situated in the complexities of politics, media, architecture, technology, economics, and history. These courses draw on key theories from a range of disciplines to examine the underlying archetypal patterns influencing personal experience and the cultural institutions which, in turn, shape and display our quandaries, aspirations, and needs. Students take at least one of these courses during the three-year program. Repeatable for creidt depending on topic.
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MS 614 - Cultural Mythologies II
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ms 615: Psyche & Nature
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Geographies of paradise, wilderness, frontier, desert, and ocean are mythic interior landscapes as well as external habitations of divinities and demons, where individual experiences tests, revelations, and illuminations. This course explores external landscapes and their (archetypal) analogues as mythopoetic spaces to discern how mythic consciousness is rooted in the poetry of landscapes.
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ms 615 - Psyche & Nature
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MS 619: Myth and the Underworld
3.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
The underworld is place, condition and situation. This course explores the journey to, the dwelling within, and the departure from, this nether region of the soul. Poetic renderings of the Underworld offer the richest repositories for the insights gleaned in this arena. The inescapable journey down and into the realm of the invisibles, where figures who journey there begin to discern its patterns, its darkness, and its treasures, is the focus of this course. In the Underworld, the archetypal ground of being is confronted most directly. Works from the early Sumerian period to contemporary psychological and literary illustrations amplify the complexity of the depth.
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MS 619 - Myth and the Underworld
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ms 620: Approaches to the Study of Myth
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
This course focuses on anthropological and depth psychological approaches to the study of sacred narratives, stories derived from oral traditions, and cultural events which invite symbolic analysis. It examines the trajectory that leads from James George Frazer and Jane Ellen Harrison to Claude Levi-Strauss; Otto Rank's and Thomas Mann's way of carrying forward Freud's interpretation of myths; how Thomas Mann, Carl Kerenyi, and Carl Jung deepened one another's ways of working with myth; and James Hillman's post-Jungian approach to mythology.
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ms 620 - Approaches to the Study of Myth
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ms 626: Mythic Motifs in Cinema
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
An application of the concepts of depth psychology to the analysis of film. Using the archetypal method, the instructor presents selected portions of films to disclose underlying themes and archetypal patterns, in an effort to illustrate as wide a range of archetypal characters as possible. Television fiction series may occasionally be included.
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ms 626 - Mythic Motifs in Cinema
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MS 627: Integrative Studies Process I
0.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Preparation for the Comprehensivee Exam is facilitated by class discussion pertaining to theoretical perspectives and thematic issues raised by first and second year coursework. This process also includes guest lectures on special topics. Pass/No Pass
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MS 627 - Integrative Studies Process I
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MS 628: Integrative Studies Process II
0.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Preparation for the Comprehensivee Exam is facilitated by class discussion pertaining to theoretical perspectives and thematic issues raised by first and second year coursework. This process also includes guest lectures on special topics. Pass/No Pass
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MS 629: Integrative Studies Process III
0.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Preparation for the Comprehensive Exam is facilitated by class discussion pertaining to theoretical perspectives and thematic issues raised by first and second year coursework. This process also includes guest lectures on special topics. Pass/No Pass
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MS 629 - Integrative Studies Process III
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