www.essex.ac.uk/cps | Psychoanalytic Studies
duration of your course. Some students may also have to pay for supervision, if this is not provided by the placement provider.
What career opportunities are available? This course will qualify you to work as a psychodynamic counsellor. It provides the training component for BACP accreditation, but further experience will be required (as with any training in the field) before personal accreditation can be applied for.
How do I find out more and apply? Applications can be made online or by requesting an application pack.
www.essex.ac.uk/pg/applying_to_essex
Jungian and Post-Jungian Studies
MA Jungian and Post-Jungian Studies
Study mode: full-time and part-time, over one year or two years; modular study available Number of credits: 180 Start date: October 2013 Campus: Colchester
Typical entry requirements You should have a good first degree
(First or Upper Second Class Honours), or an equivalent professional qualification. If you do not possess such qualifications, but can otherwise demonstrate relevant experience and academic ability, you will also be considered
If your first language is not English, you would normally be expected to demonstrate English language proficiency to at least the following levels: iBT 88 or IELTS 6.5
Why study Jungian and post-Jungian studies at Essex? This unique and internationally-acclaimed MA takes an informative, critical, and reflective stance
in relation to the key texts of Jung, the diverse contexts from which analytical psychology emerged, and the core concepts developed by Jung, post-Jungians and scholars. It explores both clinical theory and applications in areas such as cultural and gender studies, social and political theory, philosophy, myth, and religion.
This course is aimed at people from both clinical and non-clinical backgrounds who are interested in: eventually training as Jungian analysts or psychotherapists;
undertaking research using analytical psychology as the theoretical framework or methodology;
developing a Jungian depth psychological understanding of culture and society, including the psychodynamics of the workplace;
fostering creative psychodynamic thinking in the arts and media; and
enhancing their ability to work with Jungian ideas independently.
What will I learn? To critically evaluate the guiding ideas,
underlying assumptions, forms of argument, uses of evidence, and modes of expression in key texts by Jung
To understand enough of the contexts in which analytical psychology developed to discuss ways in which it either reflected or added a new dimension to those contexts
To discuss in depth the key theories and concepts of analytical psychology, both as formulated by Jung and as developed by post-Jungians
To apply analytical psychology critically to the illumination of cultural and social issues
To define and research into an area of special interest
How is the course structured? This course is taught by means of tutor-led seminars and research fora, one-to-one tutorials, and structured independent study.
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