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Glossary›Archetypal Psychology

Glossary

Archetypal Psychology

A post-Jungian depth psychology founded by James Hillman emphasizing soul, imagination, and the multiplicity of the psyche through myth and image.

What is Archetypal Psychology?

Archetypal psychology is a depth psychological approach that understands the human psyche through the lens of myth, image, and imagination. Founded by James Hillman, archetypal psychology diverges from classical Jungian analysis by shifting focus from the Self as a unifying center to soul (psyche) as an inherently multiple, image-making reality. Rather than seeking integration or wholeness, archetypal psychology explores the autonomous voices, figures, and patterns that animate psychological life—what Hillman calls “the deepest patterns of psychic functioning, ‘the fundamental fantasies that animate all life’”. This approach treats symptoms, emotions, and dreams not as problems to solve but as expressions of archetypal forces demanding recognition and imagination.

Origins & Lineage

Archetypal psychology was initiated as a distinct movement in the early 1970s by James Hillman, a psychologist who trained in analytical psychology and became the first Director of the Jung Institute in Zürich. Hillman’s magnum opus, Re-Visioning Psychology, was written in 1975 and nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. In this text, Hillman sketches a lineage that “stretches back through Freud, Dilthey, Coleridge, Schelling, Vico, Ficino, Plotinus, and Plato to Heraclitus”, grounding his work in Renaissance humanism, Neoplatonism, and Greek philosophy as much as in modern psychology. Hillman also drew heavily on the work of Henry Corbin, the French scholar of Islamic mysticism whose concept of the mundus imaginalis—the imaginal realm—became foundational to archetypal psychology’s emphasis on image over concept.

Hillman diverged from the Freudian and Jungian tradition by selecting the myth of Eros and Psyche as the symbolic basis for his psychological framework, unlike Freud’s Oedipus myth or Jung’s heroic individuation. In 1970, Hillman became editor of Spring Publications, a publishing company devoted to advancing archetypal psychology, and in 1978 he helped co-found the Dallas Institute for Humanities and Culture. He continued lecturing, writing, and practicing privately until his death at his home in Connecticut on October 27, 2011.

How It’s Practiced

Archetypal psychology is practiced less as a therapeutic technique and more as a way of seeing—a method of soul-making that attends to images, metaphors, and the personifications that arise in dreams, fantasies, and symptoms. Rather than interpreting images through diagnostic categories or personal history, practitioners engage with them as autonomous voices of the psyche. A dream figure is not reduced to a projection of the ego but honored as a messenger of an archetypal pattern—perhaps Aphrodite’s seduction, Hermes’ trickery, or Hades’ depths.

In practice, this often means slowing down, circling images, amplifying them through myth, art, poetry, and cultural resonance. Therapy becomes a form of imaginative inquiry. The therapist may ask: What does this symptom want? What god or goddess is speaking here? As Hillman famously said, “The gods have become diseases; Zeus no longer rules Olympus but rather the solar plexus”. Archetypal psychology invites practitioners to re-animate the world, recognizing soul not only in the consulting room but in architecture, politics, cities, and objects.

Archetypal Psychology Today

Today, archetypal psychology is encountered through the works of Hillman and his students, in graduate programs at institutions like Pacifica Graduate Institute (which houses the James Hillman Collection), and in interdisciplinary contexts where psychology intersects with philosophy, literature, and the arts. Spring Publications continues to publish books on mythology, philosophy, and archetypal themes. Workshops, lectures, and online courses introduce seekers to Hillman’s ideas, often framed as alternatives to clinical or diagnostic models that prioritize normalization over soul-making.

Archetypal psychology appeals to those seeking what is archetypal psychology meaning beyond symptom relief—those interested in cultivating a poetic sensibility, engaging cultural critique, and exploring the mythic dimension of personal and collective life. It also attracts artists, writers, and scholars who find its emphasis on image, metaphor, and multiplicity more resonant than ego-centered or transcendence-oriented psychologies.

Common Misconceptions

Archetypal psychology is often conflated with Jungian psychology, but the differences are significant. Jung believed archetypes are transcendent, cultural patterns not observable through experience, whereas archetypal psychology views archetypes as always phenomenal—present in the images, emotions, and experiences themselves. Hillman rejected Jung’s emphasis on the Self, integration, and individuation as overly monotheistic and heroic. Instead, he championed a polytheistic psychology that honors the multiplicity of the soul.

Another misconception is that archetypal psychology offers therapeutic techniques or a roadmap to healing. Hillman was explicitly critical of therapy as cure, arguing that psychology should be a poetic activity, not a medical science. Archetypal psychology does not promise integration, enlightenment, or personal growth in the conventional sense; it offers a way of living imaginatively with the soul’s afflictions and passions.

Finally, archetypal psychology is not a spiritual practice aimed at transcendence or union with the divine. While it honors the sacred dimension of images and myths, its focus remains earthbound, rooted in the sensory, emotional, and imaginal life of the psyche.

How to Begin

For those curious about what is archetypal psychology for beginners, the essential starting point is Hillman’s Re-Visioning Psychology (1975), which lays out the foundational concepts and critique of modern psychology. The Soul’s Code: In Search of Character and Calling (1996) offers a more accessible introduction, exploring Hillman’s “acorn theory”—the idea that each life is formed by a unique image. A Blue Fire: Selected Writings by James Hillman, edited by Thomas Moore, provides a curated anthology.

For those interested in study, Pacifica Graduate Institute offers graduate programs in depth psychology informed by archetypal perspectives. Online courses through institutions like the Kosmos Institute introduce Hillman’s work. Engaging with myth directly—reading Greek tragedies, Renaissance philosophy, or Romantic poetry—also cultivates the imaginal sensibility central to archetypal psychology. Finally, working with a depth psychologist trained in the archetypal tradition can bring these ideas into lived experience.

Related terms

advaita vedantaintegral theorypeak experiencesacred marriagemystical unionbeatific vision
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