<p>Jungian analyst Judith Hubback is interested in studying change and the resistance to it in both patients and analysts as well as enabling people to develop their full potential. She describes how she became a leading analyst in mid-life after working as a teacher journalist broadcaster and social researcher. The author reveals how she assisted patients in finding their own inner helper and how a special kind of listening can foster therapeutic relating. She traces her own psychological progress and experience in analysis; shares insights on the nature of analysis spirituality feminist issues and patients&#39; dreams; and explores links between depth psychology and world affairs.</p><p><strong>Table of Contents</strong></p><p>Acknowledgments</p><p>Family Background: Roots and Origins The Nineteen Twenties: Mostly Paris The Nineteen Thirties</p><p>Vienna</p><p>Cambridge</p><p>Transition to War</p><p>The Second World War</p><p>Transition to Peace</p><p>New Opportunities</p><p>Moving On</p><p>Wives Who Went to College</p><p>The Fifties: A Kind of Wilderness</p><p>A Possible Way Forward</p><p>Being and Becoming</p><p>Analytical Psychologist in London</p><p>Late Years and a Few Reflections Appendix. The dynamic self. Journal of Analytical Psychology 1998 43 277-285 (excerpt)</p><p>Selected Bibliography</p><p>Index</p>
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