02374 a2200337 450000500170000000800410001702000220005803700360008004000070011604100080012307200160013107200160014707200160016307200160017907200140019507200140020907200130022307200140023607200210025007200210027107200210029207200200031310000260033324500900035925000060044926000320045530000100048752014920049770000300198999900170201920250526161924.0250430042024GB 10 eng  a9781032187044qBC bTaylor & FranciscGBP 31.99fBB a01 aeng7 aJMAF2thema7 aJMAJ2thema7 aQDTM2thema7 aMKMT2thema7 aJMAF2bic7 aJMAJ2bic7 aHPM2bic7 aMMJT2bic7 aPSY0260002bisac7 aPSY0360002bisac7 aPSY0450602bisac7 a150.19542bisac1 aJudith Pickering921610aCollected Writings of Giles ClarkbRecycling Madness with Jung, Spinoza and Santayana a1 aOxfordbRoutledgec20240903 a304 p bThis timeless and thought-provoking volume makes available the collected writings of Giles Clark (1947–2019), whose original clinical theory constitutes a major contribution to the areas of analytical psychology, psychoanalysis and philosophy. Clark’s work influenced generations of analytical psychologists, psychoanalytic psychotherapists and trainees in England, Australia and elsewhere. His oeuvre covers important themes such as psychoanalysis as a deeply relational, mutually transformative and intersubjective endeavor; how, as wounded healers, analysts learn the art of recycling their own madness so as better to assist their patients; the clinical treatment of borderline and narcissistic disturbances and personality disorders; and psychosomatic issues as manifest and experienced in transference and countertransference relations in the analytic field. The book also explores the relevance of Spinoza, Santayana, Jung and German Romantic philosophers to analytical psychology and psychoanalysis, not merely in historical or theoretical terms but as a vital resource to guide clinical practice as demonstrated through a series of compelling case studies. The Collected Writings of Giles Clark is of great interest to Jungian analysts, analytical psychologists and psychotherapists in practice and in training, as well as anyone interested in understanding the interface between depth psychology, philosophy and neuropsychology, and in the mind-body problem more generally.1 aGeoffrey Samuel4B019217 c10183d10183