This work shows Judith Hubback to have been able to unify her clinical
and theoretic observations to a high degree of excellence. Less apparent
but deeply felt, is her presence as a warm and experienced observer of
all that came her way. The writing is not merely interpretive in a
psychological sense; it is the writing of a highly cultivated and
skilled literary artist.
-Joseph L. Henderson, Author, Thresholds of Initiation
Table of Contents:
- The Symbolic Attitude in Psychotherapy
- Reflections on Concepts and Experience
- People Who Do Things to Each Other: Therapists and Patients
- Manipulation, Activity and Handling
- Acting Out
- Uses and Abuses of Analogy
- VII Sermones ad Mortuos
- Envy and the Shadow
- Depressed Patients and the Coniunctio
- Reflections on the Psychology of Women
- The Assassination of Robert Kennedy
- Developments and Similarities, 1935-1980
- Body Language and the Self
- Change as a Process in the Self: What Is the Mutative Factor?
Judith Hubback is a training analyst of the London Society of
Analytical Psychology. Her degree was in History at Cambridge
University, and before becoming an Analyst in 1963 she was a teacher, a
journalist, and a sociologist. She has served as editor of the Journal
of Analytical Psychology. She has an advanced degree from Cambridge
University.