Background
Ulanov, Ann Belford was born on January 1, 1938 in Princeton, New Jersey, United States. Daughter of Ralph Jones and Ruth (Pine) Belford.
( Seated in her nest of ashes, Cinderella embodies human ...)
Seated in her nest of ashes, Cinderella embodies human misery. The essence of inner and outer nobility, she is the envy of her cruel stepmother and her ugly sisters. Using this familiar story, Ann and Barry Ulanov explore the psychological and theological aspects of envy and goodness. In their interpretation of the tale, they move back and forth between internal and external issues--from how feminine and masculine parts of persons fit or do not fit together to how individuals conduct their lives with those of the same and opposite sexes: how they conflict, compete, or join harmoniously.
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( Picturing God demonstrates the importance of confrontin...)
Picturing God demonstrates the importance of confronting our unconscious selves and allowing our images of God – both positive and negative – to surface. Such inner exploration reveals not only relevant insights about ourselves, but also pulls us beyond our private pictures of God toward a truer view of the living God. Picturing God shows us how to explore our unconscious selves and how this spiritual exercise can change the whole of our lives: how we respond to God, how we relate to others, and how we view ourselves.
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( What makes the witch still so compelling to our imagina...)
What makes the witch still so compelling to our imaginations? How does the clown reach through our tears to our laughter? The witch gives us a picture of power in the feminine, of feminine intellect and spirit, primordial in its force, authoritative in its wisdom. The clown gives us a picture of the soft feeling hidden within the masculine, which men must turn to, receive, and embrace. The Ulanovs explore these figures in a unique way-not as mere literary, anthropological, or historical themes, but in terms of what they mean to people in the actual living of their lives, in facing their problems and potentialities. Women especially need to face the witch in themselves to open to the power she embodies. Men facing the witch in themselves must deal with this fearsome power firsthand, no longer blaming women for it. Men need to face the vulnerable feelings behind the clowning masks, and open to the largeness and range of life they have hidden from in their elaborate clowning defenses. Women facing their own clowning can penetrate behind their masks to find more of their own hidden strength in feeling. Ann Belford Ulanov is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City and on the faculty of the C. G. Jung Institute of Analytical Psychology. She is professor of Psychiatry and Religion at Union Theological Seminary. Barry Ulanov is Mcintosh Professor of English and Chairman of the Program in the Arts at Barnard College. This book represents the Ulanovs' fourth collaborative work.
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(For your most intimate and significant relationship with ...)
For your most intimate and significant relationship with the opposite sex, look within yourself-to anima and animus, the archetypal symbols that define and celebrate the presence of the Feminine in men and the Masculine in women. These compelling figures express inner realities of psyche and spirit with which we all must grapple in putting together the pieces of our individual identities-whether we are married or single, sexually active or celibate, heterosexual or homosexual. They ultimately provide a bridge between the ego and the deepest Self, opening the way to profound self-knowledge and spiritual transformation. The authors use their broad backgrounds in psychology, theology, philosophy, and the arts to follow the archetypes from clinical practice into a fascinating range of cultural manifestations, particularly in the world's great literature-from Dante to Pasternak-making this book the most wide-ranging study to date of these central concepts in Jungian psychology.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0877739862/?tag=2022091-20
(Seated in her nest of ashes, Cinderella embodies human mi...)
Seated in her nest of ashes, Cinderella embodies human misery. The essence of inner and outer nobility, she is the envy of her cruel stepmother and her ugly sisters. Using this familiar story, Ann and Barry Ulanov explore the psychological and theological aspects of envy and goodness. In their interpretation of the tale, they move back and forth between internal and external issues - from how femi...
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00FGVL7SM/?tag=2022091-20
( The spiritual power of the Feminine shines forth in thi...)
The spiritual power of the Feminine shines forth in this psychological study of four Old Testament heroines from Jesus’ family tree. Tamar, Rahab, Ruth, and Bathsheba are the only women mentioned by name in the Gospels’ genealogies and, for Ann Belford Ulanov, this indicates that they impart something essential to the lineage of Christ. By exploring their brave and unconventional lives, she demonstrates how salvation enters the world in the feminine mode of being human, through these women’s embodiment of such powerful and deeply feminine qualities as ingenuity, audacity, determination, compassion, seduction, and devotion.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/3856307052/?tag=2022091-20
( This book grew out of years of reflections on real wome...)
This book grew out of years of reflections on real women's experiences. From them, Ann Ulanov states, "a common voice emerged speaking about each woman's struggle to receive all of herself. Each was trying to find and put together different parts of herself into a whole that was personal, alive, and real to herself and to others." This book focuses on helping women "receive themselves" by rejecting stereotypes and categories and seeking out their own individuality.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0664243606/?tag=2022091-20
(We live in a time of unparalleled opportunity for women a...)
We live in a time of unparalleled opportunity for women and a time, just because of that opportunity, of great stress. It is a time when every woman can find her own particular style, to develop her skills, to acknowledge her needs and failures, and to claim both her satisfactions and dissatisfactions. The old stereotypes are all but dead. But another danger threatens; of new stereotyped roles for women in the very range of choices and opportunities presented to the. "RECEIVING WOMAN grew out of a decade of reflections on women’s experiences - my own, my patients’, and my students’," writes Professor Ulanov. "From all of them, a common voice emerged speaking about each woman’s struggle to receive all of herself. Each was trying to find and put together different parts of herself into a whole that was personal, alive, and real to her and to others. I know that women want to be all of themselves and want to be their own selves, not examples of types. They want to work out their own individual combinations of what have been called the masculine and feminine parts of themselves. This book focuses on that possibility, on women receiving themselves, all of themselves, wisely and gladly." Ann Belford Ulanov, M.Div., Ph.D., L.H.D., is the Christiane Brooks Johnson Professor of Psychiatry and Religion, Emerita, at Union Theological Seminary, a psychoanalyst in private practice, and a member of the Jungian Psychoanalytic Association, New York City, and the International Association for Analytical Psychology. She is the author of many books, her most recent including: Madness and Creativity (Carolyn and Ernest Fay Series in Analytical Psychology, 2013); The Unshuttered Heart: Opening to Aliveness and Deadness in the Self (2007); Spirit in Jung (2005); Spiritual Aspects of Clinical Work (2004); and Attacked by Poison Ivy, A Psychological Study (2002). She is the co-author, with her late husband Barry Ulanov, of Religion and the Unconscious; Primary Speech: A Psychology of Prayer; Cinderella and Her Sisters: The Envied and the Envying; The Witch and The Clown: Two Archetypes of Human Sexuality; The Healing Imagination; and Transforming Sexuality: The Archetypal World of Anima and Animus.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B012Z258DY/?tag=2022091-20
( Prayer is our basic expression of religious belief. It ...)
Prayer is our basic expression of religious belief. It is our personal and most private act of devotion. Words cannot do justice to the feelings, wishes, terrors, pains, or pleasures that we exchange with God. This book sets out to define prayer as both a means of drawing nearer to God everyday and as a coping tool that people can use in order to achieve harmony, balance, and satisfaction in their in their lives.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0804211345/?tag=2022091-20
( What makes the witch still so compelling to our imagina...)
What makes the witch still so compelling to our imaginations? How does the clown reach through our tears to our laughter? The witch gives us a picture of power in the feminine, of feminine intellect and spirit, primordial in its force, authoritative in its wisdom. The clown gives us a picture of the soft feeling hidden within the masculine, which men must turn to, receive, and embrace. The Ulanovs explore these figures in a unique way-not as mere literary, anthropological, or historical themes, but in terms of what they mean to people in the actual living of their lives, in facing their problems and potentialities. Women especially need to face the witch in themselves to open to the power she embodies. Men facing the witch in themselves must deal with this fearsome power firsthand, no longer blaming women for it. Men need to face the vulnerable feelings behind the clowning masks, and open to the largeness and range of life they have hidden from in their elaborate clowning defenses. Women facing their own clowning can penetrate behind their masks to find more of their own hidden strength in feeling. Ann Belford Ulanov is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City and on the faculty of the C. G. Jung Institute of Analytical Psychology. She is professor of Psychiatry and Religion at Union Theological Seminary. Barry Ulanov is Mcintosh Professor of English and Chairman of the Program in the Arts at Barnard College. This book represents the Ulanovs' fourth collaborative work.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1630512478/?tag=2022091-20
( Seated in her nest of ashes, Cinderella embodies human ...)
Seated in her nest of ashes, Cinderella embodies human misery. The essence of inner and outer nobility, she is the envy of her cruel stepmother and her ugly sisters. Using this familiar story, Ann and Barry Ulanov explore the psychological and theological aspects of envy and goodness. In their interpretation of the tale, they move back and forth between internal and external issues—from how feminine and masculine parts of persons fit or do not fit together to how individuals conduct their lives with those of the same and opposite sexes, how they conflict, compete, or join harmoniously. The central role of envy in determining the very nature of our society—its politics, for example—is, the authors think, crucial. The authors focus on the nature of goodness as it surfaces in the envy experience. They reflect on its abundance, ability to unite disparate parts, its abiding presence, and its joy, and conclude with a brief review of the psychological literature on envy.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/385630746X/?tag=2022091-20
( This eloquent work speaks of the centrality of imaginat...)
This eloquent work speaks of the centrality of imagination in the life of the spirit. Ann and Barry Ulanov describe the imagination as a bridge between the psyche and the spirit. Using rich imagery drawn from literature, film, and their own experience as therapists, they unlock for us the healing power of our imagination. "Imagination heals by building a bridge sturdy enough to link us up, each of us, to the river of being already present in us, to the currents flowing through us and among us in our unconscious life." After describing this healing power of imagination, the authors go on to show how it is vital in the spiritual life: in preaching, prayer, teaching, counseling, and politics.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/3856307214/?tag=2022091-20
(The Wisdom of the Psyche encourages clergy to help parish...)
The Wisdom of the Psyche encourages clergy to help parishioners bring forth their unconscious feelings and images to join their conscious thoughts. In this way, the church allows its members the space to present themselves fully to God and to be fully present to the human need around them.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/385630598X/?tag=2022091-20
Psychiatry and religion educator
Ulanov, Ann Belford was born on January 1, 1938 in Princeton, New Jersey, United States. Daughter of Ralph Jones and Ruth (Pine) Belford.
Bachelor, Radcliffe, 1959. Master of Divinity, Union Theological Seminary, 1962. Doctor of Philosophy, Union Theological Seminary, 1967.
Doctor of Humane Letters (honorary), Virginia Theological Seminary, 1985. Doctor of Humane Letters (honorary), Loyola University, 1993.
Pastoral psychotherapy resident, Blanton-Peale Institutions Religion & Health, New York City, 1962-1965; Jungian analyst, C.G. Jung Institute for Analytical Psychology, New York City, 1963-1967; Christiane Brooks Johnson professor psychiatry and religion, Union Theological Seminary, New York City, since 1974; supervising analyst, faculty member, C.G. Jung Institute, New York City, since 1976.
( What makes the witch still so compelling to our imagina...)
( What makes the witch still so compelling to our imagina...)
(For your most intimate and significant relationship with ...)
( The Feminine in Jungian Psychology and in Christian The...)
( Picturing God demonstrates the importance of confrontin...)
(The Wisdom of the Psyche encourages clergy to help parish...)
( The spiritual power of the Feminine shines forth in thi...)
(The spiritual power of the Feminine shines forth in this ...)
(We live in a time of unparalleled opportunity for women a...)
( This eloquent work speaks of the centrality of imaginat...)
( This book grew out of years of reflections on real wome...)
( Seated in her nest of ashes, Cinderella embodies human ...)
(Seated in her nest of ashes, Cinderella embodies human mi...)
( Seated in her nest of ashes, Cinderella embodies human ...)
( Prayer is our basic expression of religious belief. It ...)
(2 Rev Sub)
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Member International Association Analytical Psychology, New York Association Analytical Psychology, American Association Pastoral Counselors, American Theological Society.
Married Barry Ulanov, August 21, 1968. Stepchildren: Anne, Nicholas, Kate. 1 child, Alexander.