Stanton Marlan


Stanton Marlan, Ph.D., ABPP, FABP is an American clinical psychologist, Jungian psychoanalyst, author, and educator. Marlan has authored or edited scores of publications in Analytical Psychology and Archetypal Psychology. Two of his more well-known publications are The Black Sun. The Alchemy and Art of Darkness. and Archetypal Psychologies: Reflections in Honor of James Hillman. Marlan is also known for his polemics with German Jungian psychoanalyst Wolfgang Giegerich and the latter's Neo-Hegelian and Heideggerian developments of Jungian analysis. Marlan co-founded the Pittsburgh Society of Jungian Analysts and was the first director and training coordinator of the C. G. Jung Institute Analyst Training Program of Pittsburgh. Currently, Marlan is in private practice and serves as Adjunct Professor of Clinical Psychology at Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.

Education and career

Marlan obtained a B.A. from Bard College and master's degrees in both Asian philosophy and in psychology. He later attended Duquesne University, obtaining a doctorate in clinical psychology in 1980 and a further doctorate in philosophy from Duquesne in 2014. Marlan's interests in philosophy include mainstream academic Continental European philosophy as well as various religious and spiritual traditions. Esotericism, alchemy, and dreams are among Marlan's special interests.
Marlan began his training in Jungian psychoanalysis at the C. G. Jung Institute of New York, where he studied with well-known Jungian analysts and authors Edward Edinger and Edward Whitmont, among others. He later moved to Pittsburgh and became an early graduate of the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts, graduating as a Jungian analyst in 1980. Throughout these years of psychological and psychoanalytic training, Marlan held a number of clinical and academic positions.
After his graduation as a Jungian psychoanalyst in 1980, Marlan founded the C. G. Jung Institute Analytic Training Program of Pittsburgh, a training program in Jungian psychoanalysis associated with the IRSJA. A number of Jungian psychoanalysts who work in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and elsewhere have attended the Pittsburgh Institute Analytic Training Program and have graduated from the IRSJA. Marlan has continued to teach and periodically direct the training program he founded. In 2004, Marlan co-founded the Pittsburgh Society of Jungian Analysts, comprising a number of Jungian analysts residing mostly in Western Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Western New York.
Marlan holds a number of academic and professional positions, among them Teaching and Training Analyst for the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts and Adjunct Clinical Professor of Psychology and Clinical Supervisor at the Psychology Clinic at Duquesne University. He was formerly a Member of the Board of Directors and Past President of the American Board and Academy of Psychoanalysis, a Representative for Psychoanalysis and Member on the Board of Trustees for Psychoanalysis for the American Board of Professional Psychology, a Fellow of the American Board of Psychoanalysis, and Co-Chair of the Psychoanalysis Synarchy Group for Council of Specialties in Professional Psychology. He is currently a Member of the Board of Trustees of the Accreditation Council for Psychoanalytic Education. Marlan is also active on a number of editorial boards for Jungian and psychoanalytic journals. He is a recent recipient of a Distinguished Service Award from American Board of Professional Psychology and the American Board and Academy of Psychoanalysis. He was also a cofounder and the first president of the "Psychology-Psychoanalyst Forum," which has since become the “Psychoanalytic Clinicians,” Section 5 of the American Psychological Association’s Division 39.
Marlan’s interests in the human psyche extend beyond the typical limits of psychology and psychoanalysis, into areas of religion, spirituality, and the study of experimentation with psychedelics. Marlan is co-editor of The Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion.

Publications

Marlan has written and edited a number of books and articles, mostly within the disciplines of Jungian and Archetypal Psychologies. Two of the more well-known are the following.
Marlan’s book The Black Sun: The Alchemy and Art of Darkness explores darkness as a metaphor for negative psychological experiences, such as despair and depression. As a rule, Marlan maintains, Western psychology treats such “dark” experiences as purely negative, i.e. as experiences to be avoided or, at best, “gotten through,” rather than experienced and potentially valued on their own terms. In contrast, Marlan develops an understanding of these experiences of darkness which insists on their having psychological significance of their own and not only the relative value of being a step toward some other, more positive psychological stage. His analysis in some measure deconstructs the views of both standard Western psychology and standard Jungian psychological theory, by treating the darkness as a complement to Jung's notion of the “Self.” His investigation draws on a large variety of sources, including Jungian and Archetypal theory, clinical examples, literature, poetry, art, philosophy, and religious mysticism in order to highlight the value these experiences of “darkness” can have and how they can in principle serve the purposes of psychological growth and individuation. The text includes extended clinical examples illustrating the significance Marlan attributes to the darkness. The founder of Archetypal Psychology, James Hillman, wrote of The Black Sun that “Since Jung first opened the obscurities of alchemy to psychological insight, no one has done a book as thorough, as rich, and as significant as this astounding work by Stanton Marlan.”
The book Archetypal Psychologies: Reflections in Honor of James Hillman, edited by Marlan, was inspired by a conference in honor of James Hillman’s eightieth birthday. The volume is simultaneously an example of the broad interests and applications associated with Archetypal Psychology and a retrospective, offering a view of the historical events and achievements, particularly by Hillman and a number of those responsive to his new approach to psychology, which later developed into the tradition of Archetypal Psychology. The volume includes contributions from well-known Jungian and Archetypal psychologists and represents perhaps the broadest published application of Archetypal Psychology to date.
Marlan is also known for his polemics with Wolfgang Giegerich. Giegerich is an influential German psychologist and psychoanalyst. Like Marlan, Giegerich was a collaborator with James Hillman. At a later point in time, Giegerich developed his own psychological approach, partially borrowing from traditional depth psychology, Jung, and Hillman’s Archetypal Psychology, though also critical of these same traditions. Giegerich also draws from philosophers G. W. F. Hegel and Martin Heidegger. Giegerich’s approach has become known as “psychology as the discipline of interiority.” Among the basic theses characteristic of Giegerich's work is that genuine psychology is associated with what he terms “the soul’s logical life,” a notion drawn in large measure from Hegel, in which one considers any mental product as an example of “thought thinking itself.” In other words, Giegerich's approach, rather than moving in the sphere of the personal unconscious as traditional depth psychologies do, eschews depth psychological assumptions about the importance of subjectivity and the primacy of certain mental phenomena associated with the unconscious psyche, such as images, fantasies, and dreams.
Marlan, while appreciating Giegerich's approach, has also criticized Giegerich in presentations and in published papers, in several cases provoking respectful responses from Giegerich. In particular, Marlan has argued that there is a certain range of phenomena which are relegated to a lower status by Giegerich's dialectical and logical approach to psychological life, phenomena that are nonetheless central to psychological life and to the work of analytical psychotherapy. In general, these phenomena are imaginative products, such as images, dreams, and fantasy, the core elements of psychic life which Giegerich's method seeks to “overcome.” Marlan's purpose has evidently been to preserve both the value of images and imaginative products and the value of thinking and thought products on equal terms, rather than opting for a definite primacy of either over the other.

Clinical approach

Marlan's publications suggest that his own clinical approach includes classical Jungian psychoanalysis and Archetypal psychology. However, Marlan's clinical writings also display distinctive nuances regarding clinical practice and technique.
Among the most important of these nuances is Marlan's recovery of the value of hesitation and slowness in analytic process. In his essay “Hesitation and Slowness: Gateway to Psyche’s Depth,” he highlights how classical psychoanalytical thinkers, including Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung, recognized the importance of allowing the psyche of one's patient to unfold in its own time, without pressure from the side of the analyst. For Marlan, the terms “hesitation” and “slowness” encompass a number of related ideas, including slow and careful listening on the part of the analyst, avoiding influencing the patient, allowing for the psyche of the patient to develop at its own pace and rhythm, and a certain amount of conscious reserve on the part of the analyst over and against the tendency to formulate material either too glibly or to reduce material to general theoretical precepts. Though he admits that there are times when spontaneous formulations are appropriate, Marlan suggests there is a tendency in the age of “industrialized” psychotherapy and under the pressures of managed care to move more quickly than the psyche's own tempo demands.
The Black Sun, summarized above, also includes specific clinical emphases related to the issue of hesitation and slowness. In particular, Marlan underlines a tendency both clinicians and patients can have to try to get through periods of darkness, depression, and despair as quickly as possible, rather than engaging with the darkness and drawing from those experiences their potential value for psychological growth and individuation. Even seemingly unbearable affects, Marlan maintains, can have important and profound meanings, which can be lost through attempting to speed through the difficult and uncomfortable feelings associated with the darkness.
Marlan's reading of Jung and of alchemy amplifies these points. In his essay “Jung and Alchemy: A Daimonic Reading,” Marlan differentiates his own study of Jung and of Jung's alchemical work from other approaches, especially those concerned with the historical and factual underpinnings of Jung's work and the historical and factual interpretation of alchemy. He states that "I do not read Jung for history, but for his-story… For me, reading Jung daimonically has meant a bracketing of my academic ego and letting myself be carried by fictions and gripped by an archetypal passion, a kind of madness that opens onto the scene of a magical adventure requiring an engagement not only with Jung and alchemy, but also my own psychic depths." This suggests that, just as his reading of Jung's alchemical studies is an act of imagination engendered by archetypal passion, so similarly such a passionate opening and expansion of imagination is a key element of individuation and thus essential to the practice of Jungian psychoanalysis. Such opening and expansion also require the patient to allow the seeds of psychic life to unfold at their own rate.

Educator and lecturer

Marlan was an early graduate from the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts, an organization that was originally founded to pool analytic resources of smaller Jungian training seminars, in order to aid each other in the work of analytic training and to help smaller seminars grow into larger and, ultimately, independent training programs. Marlan founded the C. G. Jung Analyst Training Program of Pittsburgh in 1981 as a participating seminar of the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts and has both directed and taught in that program ever since. He was a Fay lecturer at Texas A&M University and has lectured widely at Jungian and Archetypal conferences in the United States and abroad, including the first International Conference on Jungian Analysis and Chinese Culture in Guangzhou, China, the IAAP International Congresses in Cambridge and Barcelona, and the first international conference of the Society for Psychology as the Discipline of Interiority in Berlin. He was a keynote speaker for the Guild of Pastoral Psychology held at Oxford University, for the Jung Society at the University of Toronto, and for the ARS Alchemica at Pacifica Graduate Institute, Santa Barbara, CA. He has taught at the C. G. Jung Institut-Zürich and at other at other training institutes and universities. Marlan is Adjunct Clinical Professor of Psychology at Duquesne University as well as Clinical Supervisor at Duquesne's Psychology Clinic, positions he has held for many years.

Current projects

Among his current projects are the completion of two volumes of his collected papers and the completion of a book which continues the investigations initiated in The Black Sun. One of the volumes of collected papers, entitled C.G. Jung and the Alchemical Imagination is currently in press. It includes both updated versions of previously published papers and previously unpublished papers on psychology and alchemy.

Awards

Award from American Psychological Association, Division 39, Section V, in honor of being the Section's first President.
The Black Sun. The Alchemy and Art of Darkness, nominated for the Gradiva Award, issued by the National Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis, for creative contributions that advance psychoanalysis
Distinguished Service Awards from American Board of Professional Psychology and the American Board and Academy of Psychoanalysis.

Selected publications

Authored and edited books