TL;DR: The interpretation of a metaphor is as much a creative endeavor as making a metaphor, and as little guided by rules as mentioned in this paper, and the act of interpretation is itself a work of the imagination.
Abstract: Metaphor is the dreamwork of language and, like all dreamwork, its interpretation reflects as much on the interpreter as on the originator. The interpretation of dreams requires collaboration between a dreamer and a waker, even if they be the same person; and the act of interpretation is itself a work of the imagination. So too understanding a metaphor is as much a creative endeavor as making a metaphor, and as little guided by rules.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that art historians look to Freud's concept of the "dreamwork" to find a code of interpretation, but rather to think of representation as a mobile process that often involves substitution and contradiction.
Abstract: When French edition of this book appeared, it won immediate acclaim because of its far-reaching arguments about the structure of images and the histories ascribed to them by scholars and critics working in the tradition of Vasari and Panofsky. According to the author, visual representation has an "underside," in which seemingly intelligible forms lose their clarity and defy rational understanding. Art historians, he goes on to contend, have failed to engage this underside, where images harbor limits and contradictions, because their discipline is based upon the assumption that visual representation is made up of legible signs and lends itself to rational scholarly cognition epitomized in the "science of iconology." The author suggests that art historians look to Freud's concept of the "dreamwork"--Not to find a code of interpretation, but rather to think of representation as a mobile process that often involves substitution and contradiction. This book also offers brilliant, historically grounded readings of images ranging from the Shroud of Turin to Vermeer's Lacemaker.
TL;DR: In this article, a review of attempts to consciously control nocturnal dreaming is presented, where the authors present a model for Lucidity Training as a means of self-healing and psychological growth.
Abstract: 1 Introduction- I Historical and Cultural Perspectives on Lucid Dreaming- 2 Lucid Dreaming in Western Literature- 3 Lucid Dreams in Tibetan Buddhism- The Six Topics of N?rop?- The Teaching on Lucid Dreams- Dream Meditation- Distinguishing Metaphysics from Phenomena- 4 Lucidity, Sex, and Horror in Senoi Dreamwork- Aims of This Section- Gender and Dreams- Are Senoi Women Oppressed?- Senoi Notions of Sex and Gender- Senoi Categories of Altered States of Consciousness- Dreams- Familiars- Gender and Sacred Fluids- Creative Blood- Spiritual Powers- Great Adepts: Lucidity and Transformation- Summary and Conclusions- Who Needs Trance?- Conclusion- References- II Empirical Approaches to the Study of Lucid Dreaming- 5 From Spontaneous Event to Lucidity: A Review of Attempts to Consciously Control Nocturnal Dreaming- Methodological Considerations- Demand Characteristics- General Situational Effects- Day Residue- The Subject's Internal Processes- The Addition of an Altered State Procedure- State Changes Resulting from Sleep- Inquiry Variables- Analysis Variables- Controlling Dream Content by Implicit Suggestion- Overt Presleep Suggestion Studies- Posthypnotic Control of Dream Content- Lucid Dreaming- Why is Dream Control Important?- Conclusions- References- 6 Lucid Dream Induction: An Empirical Evaluation- Theoretical Framework- Duality of Thought- Relationship between the Dual Thought Processes- Duality of Lucid Dreaming- Conditions Associated with Lucid Dream Onset- Presleep and Pre-REM Conditions- Electrophysiological Variables- Dream Phenomenology- Discussion: Lucid Dream Onset- Lucid-Awareness Training- Personal Accounts- Alpha Feedback Training- Waking Fantasy Training- Discussion: Lucid-Awareness- Intention and Suggestion Techniques- Action-Specific Intention- Mnemonic Induction of Lucid Dreams (MILD)- Posthypnotic Suggestion (PHS)- Discussion: Intention and Suggestion- Cue "REM-Minding" Techniques- Tactile Cues- Auditory Cues- Discussion: Cue "REM-Minding"- Additional Techniques- Combined Techniques- Hypnagogic Lucidity Techniques- Conclusion- References- 7 The Psychophysiology of Lucid Dreaming- Lucid Dreaming Physiologically Verified- Physiological Correlates of the Initiation of Lucid Dreams- The Temporal Distribution of Lucid Dreams- EEG Activity during REM Lucid Dreams- NREM Lucid Dreams- Psychophysiological Relationships during REM Sleep- References- 8 Correspondence during Lucid Dreams between Dreamed and Actual Events- Methods- Results- Eye-Movement Signals and Hand Movements- Scanning Movements- Body Movements- Digit Movements- Memory and Mentation- Speech- Conclusions- "Volitional" Actions in Lucid Dreams- Sensations in Lucid Dreams- Consciousness in Lucid Dreams- References- 9 Psychological Content of Lucid versus Nonlucid Dreams- Self-Evaluations of Content- Sensations and Perceptions- Cognitions- Emotions- Summary of Self-Evaluations of Content- Judges' Evaluations of Content- Methodological Considerations- Samples- Instrument- Procedure- Results- Students- Sample Comparisons- Discussion- Conclusions- References- 10 Individual Differences Associated with Lucid Dreaming- Methodology- Lucid Dreaming Incidence- Oculomotor/Equilibratory Differences- Conclusions- Visual/Imaginal Differences- Spontaneous Waking Imagery- Induced Waking Imagery- Conclusions- Intellectual/Creative Differences- Personal/Interpersonal Differences- Demographic Differences- Personality Differences- In Review- References- III Personal Accounts and Clinical Applications- 11 A Model for Lucidity Training as a Means of Self-Healing and Psychological Growth- Retrospective View of My Own Work with Lucid Dreams- Basic Theoretical Principles- Empirical Research Surveyed- Phenomenological Experiments on Interactions with Dream Figures- Problem- Method- Results and Conclusion- Empirical Investigation of a Self-Healing Program Using Lucid Dreams- Problem- Method- Results and Conclusion- Case Studies of a Psychotherapeutic Program Using Lucid Dreams- Problem- Method- Results and Conclusion- Supplements- References- 12 Clinical Applications of Lucid Dreaming Introductory Comments- Creative Lucid Dreams- Working within the Lucid Dream- Lucid Dreaming: Using Nightmares and Sleep-Wake Confusion- Learning to Become Fully Lucid: A Program for Inner Growth- Implications of the Fact That One Is Dreaming- Dreamers Are the Primary Creative Sources of Their Dreams (CS)- Dreamers Can Recognize Aspects of the Self in the Dream Environment (SE)- The Dream World is an Alternate Reality (AR)- Individualizing Lucidity Training- References- 13 Personal Experiences in Lucid Dreaming- Personal History Relating to Lucid Dreams- Childhood- Early Adolescence- Late Adolescence and Early Adulthood- First Laboratory Experiments- Signaling from Lucid Dreams- Experiments at Home- Experimental Method- Results- Discussion- Conclusion- Update- References- 14 Without a Guru: An Account of My Lucid Dreaming- Experimentation in Lucid Dreams- Religious Significance of Lucid Dreams- The Experience of Light- IV Theoretical Implications of This New Research- 15 Out-of-the-Body Experiences and Dream Lucidity: Empirical Perspectives- The Statistical Association- A Functional Connection- Bases of the Statistical Association- The Theory of Phenomenological Equivalence- The Possibility of Neurophysiological Equivalence- The Search for Common Factors- References- 16 A Theory of Lucid Dreams and OBEs- Model Building- Reality- Altered States of Consciousness- Out-of-the-Body Experiences- Lucid Dreams- Selfless States- References- 17 Lucid Dreams in Their Natural Series: Phenomenological and Psychophysiological Findings in Relation to Meditative States- The Phenomenology of Lucid Dreams and Related Phenomena- Dream Lucidity in Relation to Normative Dreaming and Dream Bizarreness- Lucid and Control Dreams in Their Natural Series- Further Parallels between Lucidity and Meditation- Psychophysiological and Phenomenological Investigations of Lucid Dreams- First Study- Second Study- Third Study- Conclusions- Self-Reference and Transitional Organismic States- Dream Bizarreness and Lucidity- Lucidity and the Meditative Attitude- References- 18 Action and Representation in Ordinary and Lucid Dreams- to Concepts- Intentional and Deliberate Action- Self-Awareness and Responsibility- Ordinary Dreams- Lucid Dreams- Conclusions- References- 19 Dream Psychology: Operating in the Dark- References
TL;DR: This book discusses the healing of the wounded healer using the myth of Asklepios and working with nature to develop a therapeutic use of self and an introductory workshop on dreamwork.
Abstract: Acknowledgements Foreword by Professor Balfour Mount Introduction PART I: CONTEXT Beyond the medical model Ways of seeing PART II: ANCIENT HEALING The myth of Asklepios The rite of Asklepian healing PART III: THE CONTAINMENT OF CARE Towards a therapeutic use of self Working with nature Dreamwork as Earth ascending PART IV: EDUCATION Educating the wounded healer Workshops on the therapeutic use of self An introductory workshop on dreamwork PART V: PRACTICE Rosalinda Bill Conclusion Bibliography Index
TL;DR: In this paper, a new reading of the Gospels of Mark and Luke is presented, applying the poststructuralist techniques of Derrida, Lacan, and Foucault to illuminate these texts in a way that no one has done before.
Abstract: In this book Stephen D. Moore offers a dazzling new reading of the Gospels of Mark and Luke, applying the poststructuralist techniques of Derrida, Lacan, and Foucault to illuminate these texts in a way that no one has done before. Writing with wit and a great sensitivity to words and to wordplay, Moore approaches the Gospels of Mark and Luke as though they were pictograms or dreamwork to decipher and interpret, writing a response that is no less visceral and immediate than the biblical texts themselves.