Lexington Books
Pages: 308
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-1-7936-0654-9 • Hardback • July 2020 • $135.00 • (£104.00)
978-1-7936-0656-3 • Paperback • December 2021 • $48.99 • (£38.00)
978-1-7936-0655-6 • eBook • July 2020 • $46.50 • (£36.00)
Sharon L. Coggan is associate professor, Clinical Teaching Track at the University of Colorado Denver and serves as Director of the Religious Studies Program, which she created.
Acknowledgments
List of Captions
Introduction
Chapter 1 Jungian Theory: The Archetype of the “Shadow”
Chapter 2 Unio Mystica: Pan the Ancient Goat God
Chapter 3 Coincidentia Oppositorum: The Renunciate Trajectory the Smooth and the Rough
Chapter 4 Complexio Oppositorum: The Dystopian Trajectory
Chapter 5 Born From a Divided Cosmos, Christians Renounce the World
Chapter 6 Return of the Repressed
Chapter 7Coniunctio Oppositorum:Sympathy for the Devil
Bibliography
Appendix 1: Further Reading
About the Author
Sacred Disobedience is just the right title for this substantive book. Sharon L. Coggan calls for differentiation of the Pan archetype—the love for and joy in nature and of nature in us as our body—from the contaminating overlay of the Devil. Recognizing that Pan is at once 'benevolent protector and savage predator,' and using Jung's emphasis on our conscious relation to such intensity of power rather than identification with it or repudiation of it, Coggan argues for the inclusion of Pan energies in ourselves and in society. We may thereby embrace the sacred in our material world. Her extensive research includes varied areas—Axial cultures, Platonism, Stoicism, the Grail, exorcism, Elvis, jazz, disobedience, the Council of Elvira. Her extensive footnotes offer the reader even more resources. A generous and passionate offering.— Ann Belford Ulanov, author of The Psychoid, Soul and Psyche: Piercing Space/Time Barriers
The book will potentially be of the most interest to scholars already predisposed to a Jungian interpretation of the history of religions, as well as those interested in the connections between religion and nature.
— Religious Studies Review