The opportunity to participate in a conference on Analytical Psychology in Rome is without a doubt, a stroke of luck: it offers the chance to meet, with every step one takes, elements of a bygone era which remains an essential part of mutual heritage, to encounter parts our original culture, to reread pages of our history. “The human soul has an eminently historical character. As the embodiment of the unconscious, it is imbued with history and prehistory, comprehends the contents of the past, and provides the individual with the elements he should know about his prehistory. For the individual, the soul represents all the life of the past that is still alive within him.” (Memories, Dreams, Reflections)
The best way to experience what Jung calls “unexpected things becoming conscious” is to walk the streets of Rome: small winding streets, wide majestic ones, alleys, promenades, squares, wonderful little courtyards and hidden corners that suddenly appear. That’s Rome.
The XXIV International Congress of Analytical Psychology will bring together the international Jungian community to explore the psyche’s capacity for transformation in times of global uncertainty.
In an era marked by wars, political polarization, ecological crisis, technological acceleration, and widespread instability, the analytic community is called to reflect on the psyche’s capacity to create and sustain temenos—a protected yet permeable symbolic space in which transformation may occur.