
Browsing second-hand bookshops
New Zealand literature in the 1940s and 1950s
I browsed second-hand bookshops during lunchtime today and looked at the NZ literary shelves. Picked up Denis Glover’s collection of ARD Fairburn at Smith’s. Followed up tonight with a bit of surfing and found this rather nice site, with some beautiful black and white photos (RAK Mason above) and interesting articles – such as the one this links to which places the book I bought today in context:
The 1930s saw the emergence in New Zealand of a new breed of writers, whose work usually embodied a reaction against established ideas and conventions. Often these writers were influenced by recent trends in literature overseas, notably modernism; and by social and political events such as the Depression. A growing, if narrow, sense of nationalism was expressed, focussing on the dilemma of Pakeha who still looked to England as ‘Home’, but increasingly identified with New Zealand through ties of kinship and daily experience. Some major literary figures of the thirties, including short story writer Frank Sargeson, poets Allen Curnow, A.R.D. Fairburn, Denis Glover and R.A.K. Mason, and Glover’s printer associate Bob Lowry, remained active in the 1940s and 50s.
Myths about Online Psychotherapy
International Society for Mental Health Online – CCSG: Myths and Realities of Online Clinical Work Very well done. Michael Fenichel again and also John Suler are on the team. See also this Cast Study Group.
Principles – and some links to Michael Fenichel
International Society for Mental Health Online – ISMHO/PSI Suggested Principles for the Online Provision of Mental Health Services An important and useful document. A later version? Easier to navigate, but may not be authorised by International Society for Mental Health Online.
I notice Michael Fenichel, see previous post, is involved with this. I checked out his home page and found it useful: Fenichel’s Current Topics in Psychology – Online Therapy This article by him looks good. Online Psychotherapy: Technical Difficulties, Formulations and Processes.
The Here and Now of Cyberspace
This is good article by Michael Fenichel, Ph.D.
Many counselors and psychotherapists, including those who meet with clients online, rely on close analysis of interpersonal dynamics between therapist and client, using the ‘here and now’ of that particular session. Surely this now happens, not only through the use of chat rooms replete with emoticons, but also through the familiar e-mail letter exchange, which (particularly with groups) may become part of a continuing subject ‘thread’ focused on specific issues. Many deeply meaningful and powerful relationships can be formed and/or maintained via the written letter. It may be ‘asynchronous’ communication, but it still is experienced as ‘here’.
References for Psychotherapy Online
A list of References but unfortunatly not with hyperlinkds to online items. There is an NZ one:
Christensen, H., & Griffiths, K. (2000). The Internet and mental health literacy. Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 34, 975-979.
and a recent one book that sounds good:
Colon, Y., & Friedman, B. (2003). Conducting group therapy online. In S. Goss & K. Anthony (Eds.), Technology in counselling and psychotherapy: A practitioner’s guide (pp. 59-74). Houndmills, UK: Palgrave Macmillan. amazon
Here is another useful list of references: The Psychology Of The Internet: Recommended Books
Reflections on The Burial of the Soul
Reflections on Wolfgang Giegerich’s “The Burial of the Soul in Technological Civilization” by Robert Avens PhD I am looking forward to reading this.
Later, 2006-08-8: That link has gone, and robots.txt has prevented it being in the http://web.archive.org
Translated version of Das Begrabnis der Seele in die technische Zivilisation
Translated version of http://www.cgjungpage.org/psychtech/giegerich2.html
Wolfgang Giegerich has an essay – The Burial of the Soul in Technological Civilization. It is on the C G Jung Page, but only in German. I snipped a bit an searched for it in Google, found the page and then clicked the Translate this Page link. Back came a translated version of the article. Here is a sample:
Certainly, if I give the title to my lecture: Funeral of the soul into the technical civilization, then would like to seem it, as if I also into the same long-known horn of the dissatisfied ones to push and over the Seelenlosigkeit of the technology, which wanted to complain uneasiness in the culture. But so simply it does not stand around the word funeral of the soul. It does not have simply a negative, devaluing meaning, as we are bent today’s ones however to assume, because we do not have relationship to grave and funeral. That was for example with the old Egyptians completely different. These created the products of their entire culture activity to a large extent for the only purpose to let it disappear to buried and on Nimmerviedersehen in the grave.
“Interesting” English. The machine gave up about half way through as if from fatigue.
I am not sure what Giegerich is saying exactly – but it seem to fit that technology has taken the soul out of his essay – all very appropriate. Fun!
Funny that the machine could not translate “Seelenlosigkeit of the technology” – perhaps it was just too offended by the phrase!
In paragraph above I hear him saying something like this:
Technology has ripped the soul out of the world. We would be having a funeral for the loss of soul in the world if funerals were not part of that very soulfulness we have lost. The machines have won. We lost and we don’t even know it.
I don’t think like that myself. The soul has jet lag perhaps. But no, I think it is actually faster than all of our speed of light wonders. When it comes to technology the soul is like the planet Mercury – fast – and invisible a lot of the time. It takes a while for us to see it. Old technology shows off its soul but with new stuff the soul is shy, hiding behind glitz. We can see the soul now in an old ZX81 – I wish I still had ours. I think he might be saying that too, somewhere in the essay, but about wrought iron.
Here is an interesting bit, I think he is saying what i just said:
Could the winter not its own yardstick have and its own language speak, and couldn’t it not us be demanded to go along and the movement of immersing into the hellignuechterne water supportless follow the course of the yearly, so that we are with our heart in it and from it, with its measure, the world to see?
So should we learn to appreciate the soul in the new world?
He proposes the idea that we give up our disdain for technology and dive into the holy water of our sober culture…
To dive into the hellignuechterne water would mean to learn by patient hearing of the cold and speechless things of the technology a new language with its own rules and its own idioms a language, which is not our native language, but the foreign language of the concrete walls, airplanes, moon rockets, television sets, computers, atom bombs, in addition, the language of the advertisement, the statistics and the modern economy coined/shaped by multinational companies.
OK, he proposes it but does he advocate it? I am not sure about Giegerich, but it would seem William Gibson does just that in Pattern Recognition where we are steeped in the foreign language of our familiar iconised world.
I am doing Giegerich an injustice by not grasping the essay but just playing with it all. I don’t have a clue what he is saying, but I love the topic. I love some of the words: hellignuechterne which is in the opening poem: In the holy-sober water and Seelenlosigkeit I love the idea of the romantic world being the summer and us now being in the winter of the soul – just not sure if that is his idea or not!
The C.G. Jung Page: Technology Page
The C.G. Jung Page: Technology Page devoted to original attempts to understand the psychology behind technology and the impact of technology on our psychology. The page is edited by Dolores Brien. Jungian psychology and related subjects, etc.
I am interested in everything on this page. I have linked to many of these items in this weblog in the past. This has to be my cyber-mecca.
~
Later:: Sunday, 12 February, 2012
Yes but my mecca is gone!
More Quicksilver
: : : The Baroque Cycle is coming… : : :
Has an excerpt! Will be on my Palm next hotsync.


