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3.5 CE contact hours for Licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists per day and 17.5 CE contact hours for the entire 5-session program.

Each session runs from 12:00 noon – 3:30 Eastern Daylight Time with breaks as needed.

These are all online sessions, given through the program Zoom. Please download the Zoom program in advance of the first session at Zoom.us. A Zoom invitation link will be sent to registered students shortly before the start date of each program day. If you don’t receive your link by the day before the program, please check your Spam folder, then email us at cgjungny@aol.com.   These programs will not be recorded.

The C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology, Inc., is recognized by New York State Education Department’s State Board of Social Work as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed social workers #SW-0350 and by the New York State Education Department’s State Board for Mental Health Practitioners as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed psychoanalysts, #P-0015, and licensed creative arts therapists, #CAT-0068.  To receive credit, you must attend the full day program for each day registered and have a valid NYS license to practice as a social worker, psychoanalyst or creative arts therapist.

We welcome both professionals and the general public to this program.

The C.G. Jung Foundation of New York
Intensive Online Summer Study Program 2026

For over 64 years, the C.G. Jung Foundation of New York has been conducting educational programs for both professionals and the general public. It is the publisher of online Quadrant: The Journal of the C.G. Jung Foundation and runs a book service offering a wide selection of books by and about C.G. Jung and the field of analytical psychology.

The Foundation’s Summer Study Program is a unique opportunity to meet people online from all over the United States and the world who share a common interest in Jung and his ideas. Past summer participants hailed from such diverse locations as Brazil, Iceland, Switzerland, The Czech Republic, Belgium, Puerto Rico, Japan, Australia, Ireland, Venezuela, and the Pacific Northwest. Our intensive program has been carefully designed to be informative and stimulating for professionals in the field and the general public. We encourage participants from a wide range of backgrounds to attend our summer program.

Register Early! Enrollment will be limited.

I look forward to meeting you online in July.

Julie Bondanza, PhD, Program Chair and Host


Summer Study Online Program 2026


Stages of Life: C. G. Jung’s Exploration and Understanding of Death

Monday, July 20
12:00 noon – 3:30 pm ET

“Death is not a meaningless end, the mere vanishing into nothingness-it is an accomplishment, a ripe fruit on the tree of life.” C. G. Jung, CW, Vol.18, par. 1706

C.G. Jung has been recognized as the first to emphasize the psychological transition in midlife  to the second half of life.  In the second half of life a shift occurs from external ego development to the internal concern for meaning, purpose and spiritual value.  For those in the second half of life, the approach of Death becomes a conscious awareness and at times a preoccupation.

Throughout Jung’s life he embraced the myth of an afterlife.  His near-death experience after his heart attack confirmed his belief in an afterlife and transformed his previous attitude toward the last seventeen years of his life. Jung’s work now embraced his conversion experience and he was free to write about esoteric topics such as flying saucers, astrology, parapsychology, alchemy and death.

Jung believed that it was important clinically to form a position about immortality since clients in the second half of life would face their own death and needed to begin the internal work to get ready for their departure. Jung grappled with how to do this and came to the hypothesis we can do so with the hints sent to us from the unconscious, particularly in dreams and active imagination. The goal was to mine the unconscious and listen to the inner voice attentively.  According to Jung, Death in the light of eternity is a wedding, a mysterium coniunctionis (MDR, p. 314).

This workshop will explore the history of Jung’s interest in death and the afterlife, the influence from his family lineage and spiritualism, the dreams that preceded his major writings on death and the afterlife and his personal experiences around death will be noted. The workshop will be experiential and didactic and will include discussion along with a space to explore personal questions and experiences around death and immorality.

Instructor:
Jane Selinske, EdD, LCSW, NCPsyA-LP, MT-BC

Click Here to Sign-Up


Dreams, Death and Intimate Encounters with the Eternal

Tuesday, July 21
12:00 noon – 3:30 pm ET

Jung’s psychology is an incarnational psychology: it is about the soul coming into life and the soul leaving life, and it is in this round of life, death and rebirth that we each find ourselves.

What do dreams have to say about this threshold between the land of the living and the land of the dead? How do we open ourselves to establish this bridge in our own psyche and in our daily lives? This seminar explores the psyche at the threshold between life and death, where dreams, imagination, and the subtle body open into encounters with the eternal. Drawing on my clinical research with dreams of the dying at UCSD Medical Center, Marie Lousie von Franz’s work on Death and Dreams, alchemy, and accounts of near-death and psychoid experience, we will explore how the psyche prepares for death—and how it continues to relate across the boundary.

Dreams arising near death, dreams while tending the dying, and dreams following loss of loved ones will be held in the symbolizing field where we listen together for the resonance and openings to the eternal world these dreams bring to life. Participants will be introduced to alchemical perspectives on death as transformation, including motifs of burning, dissolution, and the formation of the subtle or “diamond” body. We will also explore the role of the imaginal faculty as a bridge between worlds, guided by Jung’s insight from The Red Book: “Prayer increases the light of the star; it throws a bridge across death.”

The bridge between the land of the living and the land of the dead, and the development of the Subtle body will be the focus. The star is a living symbol for the imagination and each person’s connection to the imagination. The seminar includes guided meditation and active imagination practices, allowing participants to enter into direct, embodied relationship with dream images, inner figures, and also the presence of those who have died. Through these practices, we will explore how conscious participation in the imaginal field can deepen our capacity to accompany the dying, metabolize loss, and experience continuity of soul beyond physical death.
This course is intended for clinicians, depth-oriented practitioners, and also those simply drawn to the mystery of death as a living psychological and spiritual process.

Instructor:
Monika Wikman, PhD

Click Here to Sign-Up


To Die Before We Die: Death and the Deep Imagination

Wednesday, July 22
12:00 noon – 3:30 pm ET

Death comes in many guises—an ending, a silence, a release, a return. It walks beside us in shadow and dream, in grief and in sudden joy. Across the worlds of myth, depth psychology, and contemplative wisdom, death is not simply a fact—it is a presence, a power, a sacred threshold. In this program, we will enter into dialogue with death—not to solve its mystery, but to bow to it, speak with it, and let it change us. Drawing from Jungian thought, Buddhist philosophy, and ancient myth, we will explore death as both a personal experience and a collective archetype. Together we will ask: What must die so that something true may live? This program is for those who feel death stirring in their dreams, their losses, their questions. Therapists, artists, wanderers, and witnesses are welcome.

Instructor:
Katharine Bainbridge, MFT, MA

Click Here to Sign-Up


Death and Immortality in Life

Thursday, July 23
12:00 noon – 3:30 pm ET

“When we obtain a complete realization of the self, there comes with it a feeling of immortality. . . It is the goal of individuation to reach the sense of the continuation of one’s life through the ages. It gives one the feeling of eternity on earth.” C.G. Jung, Introduction to Jungian Psychology. Notes on the Seminar in Analytical Psychology Given in 1925, p. 154

Life is an energic process which has a teleology, a striving toward a goal.  In young people, Jung says, the goal is upward, in a word, Life. After midlife, the goal is downward, a movement toward Death. In fact, these opposites exist and interact with each other throughout life. Death in life is a refusal of where life takes us. A refusal of what life offers at any age is sad and regrettable. Immortality in life includes the idea of meaning, of legacy, of creativity.

In this session we will explore examples of life refusal and the struggles toward immortality.  This exploration will include both archetypal examples as well as dreams and life examples of both the drive toward death and the drive for immortality

During this session, we will investigate elements of relational narratives and utilize art interventions to delve deeper into our personal and embodied vignettes.

Instructor:
Julie Bondanza, PhD

Click Here to Sign-Up


Death in C.G. Jung’s Black Books

Friday July 24
12:00 noon – 3:30 pm ET

Community with the dead is what both you and the dead need….
Let us build the bond of community so that living and dead images will become one and the past will live in the present. C.G. Jung, BB5, 256
Death has entered—and there is no one left to grieve. C.G. Jung, Red Book, 266
Are there also cases of death in Hell for those who have never thought about death? C.G. Jung, RB, 266
Therefore I behold death, since it teaches me how to live. C.G. Jung, RB, 275
Yet, it seems to me certain that the process of becoming conscious goes on after death. C.G. Jung, 2/12/1958

Jung’s active imagination of Black Books began as a search for the soul.  Most of the material was written during the WWI and bears the imprint of its horrific context.  Jung entered mundus imaginalis and traversed landscapes of his inner world.  Initially he travelled alone, and later in the company of his soul and a gnostic magus Philemon.  In his exploration Jung’s I encountered various figures, interactions with whom affected him deeply.  In this presentation we will focus on his encounters with the Dead.  After the death of a poor, migrant Swiss worker, Jung’s I encountered Death itself. He was visited by the procession of dead anabaptists on the pilgrimage to and from Jerusalem.  Their visitation crossed over from the world of the dead to the world of the living causing disturbances in Jung’s household. To appease them he delivered Seven Sermons to the Dead.  In other imaginal adventure, he was confronted by the three dead—souls from Ancient Egyptian and Greek underworld—who demanded that he builds the temple for the community of the living and the dead, as both life and death are aspects of the soul.

In his extensive scientific work and psychiatric analytic practice Jung dealt with human suffering and probed the mysteries of the psyche, that inevitably led to reflections of death and beyond that he framed in symbolic language.  In the recent publication of Jung’s Life and Work, the protocols of the complete interviews with Aniela Jaffé, whose edited version forms the well-known Memories, Dreams, Reflections, Jung recounts personal experiences with the dead, reincarnation, afterlife, and does so concretely without symbolic interpretation.

In our uncertain times, engaging Jung’s reflections on this dark subject can offer some orientation in our own wrestling with the angel death.

Instructor:
Sylvester Wojtkowski, PhD

Click Here to Sign-Up


 

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2026 Summer Study Faculty  

Katharine Bainbridge, MFT, MA, is a Jungian analyst and Somatic Experiencing Practitioner in private practice in Los Angeles. She is a member of the IRSJA as well as C.G Jung Institute of Los Angeles where she is a Supervisor and Instructor. Katharine has been a dedicated practitioner of Tibetan Buddhist for over 30 years. Her work explores the intersection of depth psychology, dreams, trauma, mythology, and women’s development, with a particular interest in the transformative dimensions of death and initiation. Drawing on Jungian psychology, alchemy, Buddhism, and myth, she teaches and writes about the symbolic processes of destruction, renewal, and psychic rebirth. She is currently developing a book on women’s initiations and the underworld dimensions of feminine development.

Julie Bondanza, PhD, is a Jungian analyst and licensed psychologist in private practice in the Washington DC Metropolitan area. She trained at the C.G. Jung Institute of New York, where she was on the teaching faculty for many years. She has been the director of training for both the New York Institute and the Philadelphia branch of the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts. She is the program director for the C.G. Jung Foundation of New York, where she had served for many years on its board of trustees, and she teaches in many Jungian venues across the country, both to the public and to analysts-in-training.

Jane Selinske, EdD, LCSW, NCPsyA-LP, MT-BC, is a licensed Jungian analyst, a practitioner of Mandala Assessment and Board-Certified Music Therapist. She was trained at the C.G. Jung Institute of New York and has taught psychology and Jungian theory at the Washington Jung Society, PAJA, the Institute of Expressive Analysis, the Creative Therapies Institute connected with New York University, the New York C.G. Jung Institute, Rutgers University and the New York C.G. Jung Foundation, where she is currently President of the Board of Trustees. Dr. Selinske has a practice where she unites music and imagery, art, spirituality and Jungian theory.

Monika Wikman, Ph.D., is a Jungian analyst, astrologer, teacher/group facilitator with a deep emphasis on alchemy and the incarnation of the subtle body mysteries. (She also worked in the past as a cranial-sacral practitioner with the dying.) She is the author of Pregnant Darkness: Alchemy and the Rebirth of Consciousness, and is executive editor and a contributor to Living with Fire: The Alchemical Imagination of Nathan Schwartz-Salant and its Impact on Depth Psychology. She has also contributed chapters, articles and poems to numerous publications. A graduate of the Jung-Von Franz Center for Depth Psychology in Zürich, she taught for many years in the graduate program at California State University, Los Angeles, and was a dream researcher at University of California, San Diego Medical Center on dreams of the dying. She recently saw her mate, Tom Elsner, through his intimate death process, and now focuses primarily on living in nature, writing, and meditation. She also enjoys podcasting, giving lectures and leading retreats and workshops through the Center for Alchemical Studies.

Sylvester Wojtkowski, PhD, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City. He is a graduate of the C.G. Jung Institute of New York. He received his doctorate in Clinical Psychology from the New School for Social Research. He is on the faculty of the C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology and a member of the Jungian Psychoanalytic Association. He has presented at workshops nationwide and at several national and International (IAAP) conferences for Analytical Psychology. His publications include “Deconstructing the Monstrous” in Archetypal Psychologies, ed. Stanton Marlan; “Dwelling Imaginally in Soulless Times, An Appreciation of the Work of James Hillman,” ARAS Connections: Image and Archetype, 2012; “Marriage of Madness and Reason—The Red Book and the Invention of Active Imagination,” presentation at the IAAP Congress at Copenhagen in 2013; and “Seeing Writing on the Wall—Art of Banksy and the Spirit of the Times” at the IAAP Congress in Kyoto in 2016.

 


Program Information
Program Costs

Price per person: $395 to register for all 5 sessions.
$90 per single-day program registration.

There are no scholarships available for this program.

Program is subject to change without notice.

Certificate of Completion for NYS licensed social workers, psychoanalysts, and creative arts therapists is included in the tuition. A non-credit letter of completion can be issued upon request.

Tax Deductions
Seminars of this type usually meet the requirements for IRS tax deduction, but each individual must consult with a professional tax advisor prior to registration to ascertain eligibility.

Program Registration
Class size is limited. Early registration is strongly recommended. Programs are subject to change without notice.

The full fee must be paid at the time of registration. Please register through the payment buttons on this website.  Mail in registration is available through the Registration Form, which can be downloaded by clicking here.  Register by telephone at 212-697-6430 with Visa or MasterCard.

When you pay you must also email your current email address and telephone number to the Foundation at cgjungny@aol.com.  If you are taking this course for CE contact hours for licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists, please specify which license you hold and give your NYS license number. Also indicate the name under which the license is filed.

Cancellation of Registration
There will be a cancellation fee of $15 per person per day registered on all cancellations received on or before July 11, 2026.  The C.G. Jung Foundation is not responsible for technical difficulties on the part of the seminar member during the course of the program.  No refunds after July 11, 2026. No exceptions will be made.  Only cancellations made in writing via email or letter will be deemed valid.  

Disclaimer of Responsibility
By registering for this program, the seminar member specifically waives any and all claims of action against the C.G. Jung Foundation and its staff for damages, loss, injury, accident, or death due to negligence on the part of any organization or employee providing services included in this Summer Study Program.  These programs are for educational purposes only.  They are not therapy.


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LOCATION

These are all online courses, given through the program Zoom.
Please download the Zoom program in advance of the first class session at Zoom.us


REGISTRATION

The full fee must be paid at the time of registration. Please register through the payment buttons on this website. Mail in registration and telephone registration are not available at this time.

Program Information

PROGRAM COSTS

$150 per single-day program registration. There are no scholarships available for this program.

YOU DO NOT NEED A PAYPAL ACCOUNT. HERE IS HOW TO PAY WITH CREDIT CARD: On the Paypal login page, look below login fields for a boxed link that reads PAY WITH DEBIT OR CREDITCARD.

 

2026 Summer Study Online Program

YOU DO NOT NEED A PAYPAL ACCOUNT. HERE IS HOW TO PAY WITH CREDIT CARD:

On the Paypal login page, look below login fields for a boxed link that reads PAY WITH DEBIT OR CREDIT CARD.



Death and Immortality

$395 to register for all 5 sessions


$90 per single-day program registration.

Monday, July 20
Stages of Life: C. G. Jung’s Exploration and Understanding of Death

Tuesday, July 21
Dreams, Death and Intimate Encounters with the Eternal

Wednesday, July 22
To Die Before We Die: Death and the Deep Imagination

Thursday, July 23
Death and Immortality in Life

Friday, July 24
Death in C.G. Jung’s Black Books

 

2026 Summer Study Online Program

YOU DO NOT NEED A PAYPAL ACCOUNT. HERE IS HOW TO PAY WITH CREDIT CARD:

On the Paypal login page, look below login fields for a boxed link that reads PAY WITH DEBIT OR CREDIT CARD.



Death and Immortality

$395 to register for all 5 sessions


$90 per single-day program registration.

Monday, July 20
Stages of Life: C. G. Jung’s Exploration and Understanding of Death

Tuesday, July 21
Dreams, Death and Intimate Encounters with the Eternal

Wednesday, July 22
To Die Before We Die: Death and the Deep Imagination

Thursday, July 23
Death and Immortality in Life

Friday, July 24
Death in C.G. Jung’s Black Books


$450 Price Per Person: for all 5 program days.


$100 Per Person Per Single-Day Program Registration. 

 


Monday, July 11
Transformation


Tuesday, July 12
Images of Transformation


Wednesday, July 13
Transforming Compulsion:
The Mystery of Unconscious Agency


Thursday, July 14
Transgression and Transformation:
Is Analysis a "Dangerous Method"?


Friday, July 15
Transformation, Redemption and Individuation


MAIL-IN REGISTRATION FORM
Click Here

 


For more information, call or write:

Office of the Executive Director
The C.G. Jung Foundation of New York
28 East 39th Street
New York, New York 10016
Telephone: (212) 697-6430
Email: cgjungny@aol.com
Web address: www.cgjungny.org
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