The Four Pillars of Jungian Psychoanalysis is a work that describes
the methods that in combination sets this form of psychotherapy apart
from all the others. The first chapter describes how the theory of
individuation serves as an assessment tool for the analyst and guides
the process toward the client's further psychological development.
The second chapter, on the analytic relationship, discusses the depth
psychological understanding of the healing effect of the therapeutic
encounter. Working with dreams and active imagination comprise the other
two chapters. In both of these chapters, there is detailed discussions
of how these methods are used in Jungian psychoanalysis and to what
purpose. It is the combination of "the four pillars" that makes Jungian
psychoanalysis unique.